OK so I have been thinking of doing a heat exchanger for hot water. It doesn't seem that popular here in the US.
I guess I am looking for the Pros and Cons. I am also looking for options where to acquire one here in the US.
KD
What kind do you plan on using? I plan on a plate exchanger for me. I have not picked it yet, but I would like to hear your thoughts.
I've been running a plate for a looooong time... 15 years at least.
Important tip: make sure you have a way to drain ALL the clear water from the HE. Ask me how I know.
If you know what you need, you can assemble them fairly cheaply from parts. I just replaced my plate, and it was $30 brand new via eBay. However, I had to purchase fittings (and custom make one) which eclipses the cost of the plate... I also designed and fabricated new mounting brackets, as the new one is smaller than the old one I had, and the old brackets were steel (and dissolved).
Then you need tubing, fittings (Home Depot), a demand water pump, water tank (mine is custom and sits behind the left rear wheel and is filled from inside), shower/sink connection point on the truck and that's about it. Optional (good idea) is a whole-house water filter between the tank and pump. I got some REALLY rusty water one time.
View attachment 775182
Clear water lines are not yet connected in this image (and the forward one is too long anyway). I was able to use a Swagelok compression fitting (metric) on the forward connection; however, the rear connection is a unique size and I had to make an internally threaded connection with an o-ring face-seal for that... This HE is thicker (more plates) but less height and width compared to the one I had. But it's still 4000BTU/Hr. so plenty for a shower (or hot tea).
If you are not super-handy with designing and making custom brass fittings, you can contact Alfa-Laval, who made my first HE. The mount brackets are easy to work out based on my image above.
PS copper brazed 316SS construction. Mike Ladden had a copper tube HE that was crap and failed, so way back then I found a better solution, which is the plate by a long shot.
I've been running a plate for a looooong time... 15 years at least.
Important tip: make sure you have a way to drain ALL the clear water from the HE. Ask me how I know.
If you know what you need, you can assemble them fairly cheaply from parts. I just replaced my plate, and it was $30 brand new via eBay. However, I had to purchase fittings (and custom make one) which eclipses the cost of the plate... I also designed and fabricated new mounting brackets, as the new one is smaller than the old one I had, and the old brackets were steel (and dissolved).
Then you need tubing, fittings (Home Depot), a demand water pump, water tank (mine is custom and sits behind the left rear wheel and is filled from inside), shower/sink connection point on the truck and that's about it. Optional (good idea) is a whole-house water filter between the tank and pump. I got some REALLY rusty water one time.
View attachment 775182
Clear water lines are not yet connected in this image (and the forward one is too long anyway). I was able to use a Swagelok compression fitting (metric) on the forward connection; however, the rear connection is a unique size and I had to make an internally threaded connection with an o-ring face-seal for that... This HE is thicker (more plates) but less height and width compared to the one I had. But it's still 4000BTU/Hr. so plenty for a shower (or hot tea).
If you are not super-handy with designing and making custom brass fittings, you can contact Alfa-Laval, who made my first HE. The mount brackets are easy to work out based on my image above.
PS copper brazed 316SS construction. Mike Ladden had a copper tube HE that was crap and failed, so way back then I found a better solution, which is the plate by a long shot.
Well, no, because there only so much heat available to transfer, and the "rating" is based on maximum flow on both sides (which you won't have).
It "boils down" (HA!) to cost and physical size. You need to pay for it and mount it somewhere. My new one is smaller but thicker (more plates) as compared to the original one I had. But same BTU/Hr. rating (or thereabouts).