Hello to all, I am looking for some feedback for designing my outdoor wood furnace system.
I recently began researching outdoor wood furnaces and through process of elimination ended up pulling the trigger on an Earth owb Mountain Man 505. It was a hard choice, found a lot of nice furnaces along the way but for my needs and budget this was the furnace for me.
I went through my local distributor who was helpful but I prefer a direct route. I don't like product that has changed hands several times that has incurred price mark ups along the way. I like saving money when I can and spending it where I need it.
I ordered my mountain man 505 with 4 (ports) outputs and 4 inputs, polar wrapped, etc. anything that could be factory done, I did... now I will take over from there. (The reason I didn't order the pumps or anything else is because I wanted to choose what I need, buy local (hopefully) from somewhere that when things hit the fan I know I can find a replacement part without delay?)
Also I had a competitor company come out. The price for their furnace was awesome but by the time they got done quoting my parts and install we went from $8,000 to $15,000. I know I can get parts and do the install myself for cheaper than $7,000. I even sent their estimate to other owb companies who were shocked on how high their quote was. This forced my decision to do it myself.
I attached a quick drawing on my thoughts so far...
I have the earth mountain man 505 plumbed with 4 output ports for:
1) serve my barn
2) serve my pool and spa (future use)
3) serve my home (future use)
4) spare
I plan on running 4 different loops, independent of each other
My first run... what I need for this winter
Tomorrow I am setting a 5'x10'x6" concrete foundation myself for ($190) then from the owb I need to run 60' underground to my barn.
I need 1" supply, 1" return, 1/2" water fill line, and electric in the ditch (code requirements say separate electric and water but my well has both???) either way, i contracted someone to dig the ditch 4' deep x 1' wide x 60' long, ($500) i will put the plumbing down one side and electric down the other then the local spray foam guy said he would spray foam around the pipe ($500), I am thinking logstor brand pipe but I would like all 3 water lines in one? Anyone know where I can find this stuff in south-east michigan?
From the feed into the barn I get a little confused. My barn is 40'x40' overall and two stories. The upper level I do not plan on heating, however I am going to insulate it and allow the heat from the open parking area to escape into it. The owb is my primary and only form of heat for the barn. I do have a backup electric toe kick heater in the utility closet to keep the essential plumbing from freezing but thats it. Inside the barn I have a finished off 10' x 40' area that I plan on residing in while I build my house. The entire barn first floor has 10' ceilings and constructed of 2"x6" with spray foam all the way around (not yet, but soon it will). All the doors are also insulated and windows were the best I could afford.
Once the 1" supply enters the barn, I want a temperature gauge, then I plan on installing a 'main' run through the barn walls ending in the south/west corner of the barn where I plan on placing a hanging heater at the end of the supply.
From the hanging heater, I am going to install a 'main' return line paralleling the supply back out to the owb.
My thoughts is having a pump circulating the main line 24/7 and branching off of the main line with the components?
the fist component will be a 20 or 30 plate heat exchanger with mixing valve plumbed in for domestic hot water, i currently have a tankless h2o tank, so plumbing will be a bit tricky, any advice?, i want to heat my water with my owb first then have my electric h2o heater as a backup
next components will be
6' baseboard heater
6' baseboard heater
15' baseboard heater
15' baseboard heater
installed around the inside of my living area, they will draw from the supply line and drain into the return line. I got advice from a pro that they should all be independently thermostated so that they cycle as needed to keep the heat even and reduce demand but I would prefer one thermostat, any advice?,
(I also think a water to air exchanger mounted elsewhere in the barn and ducted along the ceiling would be cheaper and easier to install then 4 baseboards... but what do i know, the pro told me to go baseboard because heat goes up?)
finally in the area designated for parking I want to install a large enough btu water to air wall hung unit to heat the 40x30x10 portion of the barn when I work on my cars, the rest of the time I will keep it at 50ish but having the ability to knock the chill out to change oil or brake pads would be awesome...
Im guessing the run from the owb through the barn and back with a +10% allowance will put me at a 350' loop. Any suggestions on a good pump?
also any advice and tips on what i should use, shouldn't use and what to run away from... i like shutoffs and isolation so when things go wrong its easier to fix, sharkbite connectors look great, i see 10' straight pipe at my local home depot which might save me from wrestling with a coil, any other tips?
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