Chorky
Observer
Thank you all for so much great information! For some reason this portion really has been confusing me more than other options as I continue my build. For reference, I am putting all this together on a '97 F350 diesel. The plan (as loosely described in post #1) is to have a water system integrated with a custom bed so fresh (including hot), purified and filtered water is always at the ready on the truck with a draw feature from various water sources (or a fill from a standard garden hose, or city water hook-up) to be used with either a camper or in work situations.
So to summarize the discussion so far:
There are really two ways to go about (diesel) hot water systems.
1) A isolated system where the diesel heater would run hot coolant thus heating cold water plumbed from the tank. This would also require a second tank specifically for the cooling system (even if its only a small amount) to allow for coolant expansion when hot.
2) instead of a isolated heat system, plumb the system in with the engines coolant. This would allow for engine pre-heat, water heat from engine heat, would remove the need for a water heat system specific coolant tank at the cost of a more complex system that is tied to the engine.
3)Regardless, for either system, a heat exchanger of some sort, such as a calorifier, is required. So the system is in fact more complex than a normal RV style water heater because coolant is necessary for prolonged life of the diesel heater as two fluids (water and coolant) are needed.
The benefits of:
1)the system is isolated and does not require messing with the engines coolant system, which could cause a headache, would allow for easier bed transfer to a different vehicle if necessary, allows for future changes to hook up to the engine if desired, does not put extra strain on the engine coolant pump as coolant runs would be long to the bed
2) engine pre-heat would be very nice in very cold northern climates, allows for hot water when engine is running and reduces amount of run time for water heater unit, thus lowering total fuel consumption
Some notes regarding:
1) Seems to be the simplest system, but does not take advantage of all possibilities
2) I suppose this would warrant some isolation (shutoff) valves at the engine heater core and at the diesel heater, or where ever the 'tie-in' portions are so that if damage to the lines under the truck occurs, the engine at least will be operational at the expense of no hot water. This certainly seems to me to complicate things when a simple system is desired, and is the purpose of desiring a diesel system in the first place, especially since I can't seem to find any info discussing the direction of coolant flow of my engine. A standard propane system would be more simple it seems, at the cost of a secondary system that is not as fuel efficient and is highly volatile. In super cold temps, having extending engine coolant hoses below the vehicle may further reduce the engine's ability to operate at a proper temperature even if insulated?? Maybe instead of flexible and vulnerable coolant hoses, one could source out aluminum tubes, and fabricate a skid plate?
To pull over some conversations that have occurred in the following thread (which was supposed to be about electrical requirements, but turned into diesel coolant discussions:
https://www.expeditionportal.com/fo...g-battery-needs-for-uses.202021/#post-2580488
1) plumbing the water heater system into the engine would also reduce total ah required of batteries (in theory) as water would be hot by the time a campsite was reached. However, in reality, the diesel water heater could be ran while in motion, thus the real savings is in diesel fuel, not electrical power.
So some more questions for you all:
1) anyone willing to show just a couple of pictures of your heat exchangers and diesel systems please?
2) if I did decide to plumb into the engine system, what would be the best way to run coolant under the cab (it's a crew cab), across the frame to the passenger side, and back up into the bed - this seems like a long run to me. I suppose I could put the heater on the passenger side; however, that is where the electrical dist. box and batteries are planned to be and I didn't like the idea of having water and electrical in the same area. If I put the electrical on the drivers side then I would have a long wire run from the alternator. So I'm not sure which compromise is the better one.... THis is of course assuming the tank and diesel heater 'system' would take up an entire side box which is the purpose for #1 above, as I dont' know the dimensions of what a 'system' would be.
3) do you not think that having this much extra of a coolant system run would cause extra strain on the vehicle's coolant pump?? What about trying to pump coolant through the entire engine with the diesel heater's pump. I guess I'm unsure of how much 'strain' they stand up to and where the failure point is of this topic. Also, having the water heater hooked up to the engine coolant as well would make for a longer water heater warm-up time as the entire engine coolant would have to be heated instead of a significantly smaller amount that is also not loosing heat from a huge iron diesel block. - thoughts on this?
4) how much space is actually needed for a diesel heater with a heat exchanger? I'm hoping all this could in fact fit in a standard side box of a flatbed.
5) If the diesel heater was inside one of these boxes, fully enclosed, of course with an exhaust and fresh air inlet port for combustion, how much residual heat is given off from the heater itself? In other words, if I had in this same compartment, the actual water pump, water draw pump and various filters, would the residual heat from the operation of the heater keep temps above freezing to protect other water components, or will I be looking at needing to use a 12v heat pad or something
6) I think I would probably not use a mixing valve. For one it's just another connection point that could leak or get damaged, and second, I think proper mixing could happen at the faucet just fine. I would hope appliances could handle 180 degree water anyway... I probably should check on that. It would also be nice to have the option for super hot water if I needed it for washing something that is not my skin. Thoughts on this?
I know, lots of questions..... But I really want to do this right the first time.
Thank's again for all the great info. I think this is turning into some excellent discussion
So to summarize the discussion so far:
There are really two ways to go about (diesel) hot water systems.
1) A isolated system where the diesel heater would run hot coolant thus heating cold water plumbed from the tank. This would also require a second tank specifically for the cooling system (even if its only a small amount) to allow for coolant expansion when hot.
2) instead of a isolated heat system, plumb the system in with the engines coolant. This would allow for engine pre-heat, water heat from engine heat, would remove the need for a water heat system specific coolant tank at the cost of a more complex system that is tied to the engine.
3)Regardless, for either system, a heat exchanger of some sort, such as a calorifier, is required. So the system is in fact more complex than a normal RV style water heater because coolant is necessary for prolonged life of the diesel heater as two fluids (water and coolant) are needed.
The benefits of:
1)the system is isolated and does not require messing with the engines coolant system, which could cause a headache, would allow for easier bed transfer to a different vehicle if necessary, allows for future changes to hook up to the engine if desired, does not put extra strain on the engine coolant pump as coolant runs would be long to the bed
2) engine pre-heat would be very nice in very cold northern climates, allows for hot water when engine is running and reduces amount of run time for water heater unit, thus lowering total fuel consumption
Some notes regarding:
1) Seems to be the simplest system, but does not take advantage of all possibilities
2) I suppose this would warrant some isolation (shutoff) valves at the engine heater core and at the diesel heater, or where ever the 'tie-in' portions are so that if damage to the lines under the truck occurs, the engine at least will be operational at the expense of no hot water. This certainly seems to me to complicate things when a simple system is desired, and is the purpose of desiring a diesel system in the first place, especially since I can't seem to find any info discussing the direction of coolant flow of my engine. A standard propane system would be more simple it seems, at the cost of a secondary system that is not as fuel efficient and is highly volatile. In super cold temps, having extending engine coolant hoses below the vehicle may further reduce the engine's ability to operate at a proper temperature even if insulated?? Maybe instead of flexible and vulnerable coolant hoses, one could source out aluminum tubes, and fabricate a skid plate?
To pull over some conversations that have occurred in the following thread (which was supposed to be about electrical requirements, but turned into diesel coolant discussions:
https://www.expeditionportal.com/fo...g-battery-needs-for-uses.202021/#post-2580488
1) plumbing the water heater system into the engine would also reduce total ah required of batteries (in theory) as water would be hot by the time a campsite was reached. However, in reality, the diesel water heater could be ran while in motion, thus the real savings is in diesel fuel, not electrical power.
So some more questions for you all:
1) anyone willing to show just a couple of pictures of your heat exchangers and diesel systems please?
2) if I did decide to plumb into the engine system, what would be the best way to run coolant under the cab (it's a crew cab), across the frame to the passenger side, and back up into the bed - this seems like a long run to me. I suppose I could put the heater on the passenger side; however, that is where the electrical dist. box and batteries are planned to be and I didn't like the idea of having water and electrical in the same area. If I put the electrical on the drivers side then I would have a long wire run from the alternator. So I'm not sure which compromise is the better one.... THis is of course assuming the tank and diesel heater 'system' would take up an entire side box which is the purpose for #1 above, as I dont' know the dimensions of what a 'system' would be.
3) do you not think that having this much extra of a coolant system run would cause extra strain on the vehicle's coolant pump?? What about trying to pump coolant through the entire engine with the diesel heater's pump. I guess I'm unsure of how much 'strain' they stand up to and where the failure point is of this topic. Also, having the water heater hooked up to the engine coolant as well would make for a longer water heater warm-up time as the entire engine coolant would have to be heated instead of a significantly smaller amount that is also not loosing heat from a huge iron diesel block. - thoughts on this?
4) how much space is actually needed for a diesel heater with a heat exchanger? I'm hoping all this could in fact fit in a standard side box of a flatbed.
5) If the diesel heater was inside one of these boxes, fully enclosed, of course with an exhaust and fresh air inlet port for combustion, how much residual heat is given off from the heater itself? In other words, if I had in this same compartment, the actual water pump, water draw pump and various filters, would the residual heat from the operation of the heater keep temps above freezing to protect other water components, or will I be looking at needing to use a 12v heat pad or something
6) I think I would probably not use a mixing valve. For one it's just another connection point that could leak or get damaged, and second, I think proper mixing could happen at the faucet just fine. I would hope appliances could handle 180 degree water anyway... I probably should check on that. It would also be nice to have the option for super hot water if I needed it for washing something that is not my skin. Thoughts on this?
I know, lots of questions..... But I really want to do this right the first time.
Thank's again for all the great info. I think this is turning into some excellent discussion
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