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Copper tubing for wall heat?
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Topic: Copper tubing for wall heat? (Read 52061 times)
mlappin
Fabricator Extraordinaire
Global Moderator
Hero Member
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Posts: 4140
OWF Brand: homebuilt, now HeatmasterSS
OWF Model: Martin Steel Works Gen 1 then, now a G200.
North Liberty, Indiana
Re: Copper tubing for wall heat?
«
Reply #30 on:
March 15, 2020, 08:22:10 PM »
You can definitely feel the heat coming out, like 116-118 degrees out of each one. Much to my wife’s horror there was a cobweb above the one you could visibly see getting moved around when it was on.
Once I have the Mac back up and running I’ll post some pictures, trying to do it from my smart phone is a bad joke at best.
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Stihl 023
Stihl 362
Stihl 460
Sachs Dolmar 112 and 120
Homemade skid steer mounted splitter, 30" throat, 5" cylinder
Wood-Eze model 8100 firewood processor
HeatmasterSS dealer for Northern Indiana
mlappin
Fabricator Extraordinaire
Global Moderator
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 4140
OWF Brand: homebuilt, now HeatmasterSS
OWF Model: Martin Steel Works Gen 1 then, now a G200.
North Liberty, Indiana
Re: Copper tubing for wall heat?
«
Reply #31 on:
March 31, 2020, 08:42:59 PM »
Middle stud bay, only one that came close to a standard width, at one time there was a door in two different spots in that wall. Placed a piece of lathe between the pex and the foil insulation as it was heating the wall up pretty good on the bedroom side. Wasn’t sure if it would cause issues with the drywall later.
Wall heat on the Cheap
by
Marty Lappin
, on Flickr
One of the narrow ones, still managed to get at least 75’ of pipe in it, just kept the coils closer together.
Wall heat on the Cheap
by
Marty Lappin
, on Flickr
First one I did, have a 4”x10” register top and bottom on the bedroom side of the wall. Used a piece of insulation board caulked in place top and bottom to seal the stud bay off.
Wall heat on the Cheap
by
Marty Lappin
, on Flickr
Irwin 1” speed bit with a 10-12” extension was just barely long enough to get thru the beam into the basement.
Wall heat on the Cheap
by
Marty Lappin
, on Flickr
Those speed bits just eat batteries once they grab hold.
Wall heat on the Cheap
by
Marty Lappin
, on Flickr
Logged
Stihl 023
Stihl 362
Stihl 460
Sachs Dolmar 112 and 120
Homemade skid steer mounted splitter, 30" throat, 5" cylinder
Wood-Eze model 8100 firewood processor
HeatmasterSS dealer for Northern Indiana
mlappin
Fabricator Extraordinaire
Global Moderator
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 4140
OWF Brand: homebuilt, now HeatmasterSS
OWF Model: Martin Steel Works Gen 1 then, now a G200.
North Liberty, Indiana
Re: Copper tubing for wall heat?
«
Reply #32 on:
March 31, 2020, 08:55:20 PM »
Stripped the lathe and plaster on the walls then just the plaster on the ceiling as it had 6” of blown in above it. Screwed strips of 1/2” plywood to the ceiling joists to keep the lathe tight and act as a spacer, then added a 1” foil faced polystyrene insulation board, then screwed 2x4’s over the insulation and fastened the drywall to that so ended up with a double dead airspace to add to the insulation value.
Wall heat on the Cheap
by
Marty Lappin
, on Flickr
Picture of the temps partway thru a heating cycle. Diminishing returns seem to add up faster with this than say baseboard. 64 to 70 is pretty fast actually, little more than an hour on a room thats a little under 12’ x 15’, out of curiosity once its over 73 it takes a LONG time to keep gaining any, might take as long to gain another degree once its over 73 as it did to get it from 64 to 70.
Wall heat on the Cheap
by
Marty Lappin
, on Flickr
Wall heat on the Cheap
by
Marty Lappin
, on Flickr
Logged
Stihl 023
Stihl 362
Stihl 460
Sachs Dolmar 112 and 120
Homemade skid steer mounted splitter, 30" throat, 5" cylinder
Wood-Eze model 8100 firewood processor
HeatmasterSS dealer for Northern Indiana
E Yoder
Hero Member
Offline
Posts: 1296
OWF Brand: HeatMaster
OWF Model: GS 100
Re: Copper tubing for wall heat?
«
Reply #33 on:
April 01, 2020, 04:47:49 AM »
Im getting ready to start a similar project this summer if it slows down enough. I'll post some pictures when I get done. Have a room with a cast iron rad, but would like the wall space, so I'm thinking radiant wall. Floor is concrete so no radiant there.
Thanks for the pictures!
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HeatMaster dealer serving southwest VA.
www.heatmasterfurnace.com
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Outdoor Wood Furnace Info
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Copper tubing for wall heat?