I'm building my next campervan and I'm incorporating a diesel coolant heating/hydronic heating system. (van is diesel E350).
I don't have any experience with diesel heaters aside from a toyotomi cabin (air) heater that I had in my last van.
Most Diesel Coolant/water heaters seem to be 5kw heat output. I don't really know what that relates to, or how it would perform in real life. It looks like I can get a 12k heater for not much more money.
Does anyone have any reasons I shouldn't get the bigger version, or how the 5kw would work for heating 15 gallons of coolant and domestic hot water?
Also, anyone have any real life experience with a diesel coolant/parking heater? Any recommendations? I'm not looking to buy a $2000 Webasto or Eberspacher... a knockoff version is OK with me.
Unicat told me that an oversized heater leads to more rapid soot/carbon buildup in the combustion chamber, which can cause premature malfunction (at exactly the wrong time of course), necessitating a rebuild or even replacement.
Because it spends too much time at the lowest heat output; OTOH higher output more of the time “burns the carbon buildup out”. Like an old carbureted spark ignition engine idling too much and fouling spark plugs. Fixed by high speed running.
FWIW, my camper box is ~16’ long. Starting 5kw Webasto at -20F results in thoroughly warm camper in ~4 hours.
Calculations with R values of camper walls/floor/ceiling show it can keep my box warm at Martian polar winter temperatures. Far below where #1 diesel would be solid.
The above potential problems with a 9kw or larger heater for a 12-16’ well insulated box would get much worse at altitude.
If anyone is interested, Unicat sent me a workaround to the altitude issue for non altitude compensating diesel heaters that’s very simple and totally non electronic.
Rather than a bigger heater I’d consider a 5kw hydronic plus a 2kw air heater, for rapid warmup and that thing called “redundancy”.