Endless HOT water for FREE /OFF GRID

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 11 окт 2024
  • We are a large family living Off GRID enjoying life. We built our house with just our family. Slowly we are working towards it being finished. Hot water is our next step. Come along with us as we put in this luxury of running HOT water. Please subscribe if you like what you see.
    Welcome to Countryside Acres Homestead
    We are a family friendly channel
    We are a family of 11 minus 1
    that lives and Farms/Homesteads in
    Northern Canada.
    We bought a 200 acre piece of land in July 2020
    and started to build our home/homestead from scratch.
    We started these VLOGS for our Family and Friends to follow us on
    our journey and it has been growing weekly ever since.
    We are so very grateful for each and every one of you for watching
    our videos and giving us the love and support.
    Because of your kindness it gives us encouragement to continue our
    VLOGGING adventure.
    We thank you for joining and watching our videos
    Please like share and Subscribe
    If you want to support in other ways please follow the links below
    www.paypal.com...
    www.amazon.ca/...
    You can also follow along with some other hidden pictures and messages on our
    Facebook / 587893505405357
    Instagram / countrysideacres
    COMING SOON we will have Patron videos and fun filled stuff
    so follow the link and join us there so you don't miss when we start posting there
    www.patreon.co...

Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @davidjones8680
    @davidjones8680 2 года назад +53

    I did exactly that to my wood stove back in Jan 1972, now had 50 years of endless hot water.
    David in the UK.

  • @chandlerhembree9607
    @chandlerhembree9607 2 года назад +289

    It's wonderful to see children helping the family instead of setting in front of the t.v or gaming....... Way to go young men.

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  2 года назад +18

      Thank you

    • @keycontroller
      @keycontroller 2 года назад +8

      😂building a house dont think tv is installed yet😂🤣

    • @rfpeace
      @rfpeace 2 года назад +3

      yeah this is EXACTLY how our next generation needs to learn to do stuff, no apps, no amazon, and definitely no service personnel (no discredit to contractors, I've been an electrician for over 30 yrs., but I'm unable to accept the liability of certain projects simply because the devices weren't UL and I can't imagine what a licensed plumber would say???) Cheers

    • @justyana488
      @justyana488 2 года назад +9

      How are some of us supposed to learn. I'm on my phone yes, but I'm watching this which is pretty useful to me.

    • @A96Z86
      @A96Z86 2 года назад +1

      @@rfpeace that's the opposite of how evolution works but ok

  • @iansanders9327
    @iansanders9327 2 года назад +115

    Great to see! This was the way most houses did it in the UK in the days of coal, inset fires had a back-boiler tank, with thermosyphon connected to a hot water tank above the bathroom. Couple of hints from my dad who worked on these systems: 1. Thermosyphon tube should be 1 inch ID or more for full efficiency, or the fluid drag of a smalller pipe significantly reduces your output (1 inch is almost double the cross-section of 3/4). 2. Any 90 degree elbow in the plumbing run reduces the syphon flow by a significant degree, so always try to use wide sweeping bends. 3. Always have a radiator somewhere in the circuit that will dump heat from the system if it gets too much. I’ve not tried this myself yet and it’s great to see this works well even with smaller tube ...and if you are getting what you need and are running the burner anyway, then good enough is good!

    • @thephantomraspberryblower2675
      @thephantomraspberryblower2675 2 года назад +6

      I remember having to light the fire if you wanted a bath.
      No such thing as a quick shower first thing.

    • @danieloday9985
      @danieloday9985 2 года назад +5

      Concur. I lived in the UK and installed a coal stove with a back boiler to drive the radiators with a pumped system. The domestic hot water cylinder was on a 1" gravity loop. The thing that mine had that I don't see here was as the stove had an actual water jacket, the air feed to the stove was controlled by a thermostatic damper to keep the water temp in the stove and cylinder from ever reaching boiling as if it does you risk blowing pipes or worse yet a steam explosion of the hot water loop. Plan for the event that there is more heat in the water than you are using. A heat leakage radiator would certainly help.

    • @GeneralThargor
      @GeneralThargor 2 года назад

      I love my back boiler. light the fire in the living room and it heats the entire house up!

    • @johnstidworthy3370
      @johnstidworthy3370 2 года назад +2

      How about a header tank on the closed gravity loop to take up expansion of the fluid and ?

    • @peterfitzpatrick7032
      @peterfitzpatrick7032 2 года назад +3

      @@johnstidworthy3370 I was wondering where it was.... as it stands, this looks like an unvented system.... with no fail-safes 🤔

  • @Robsx2
    @Robsx2 2 года назад +12

    Great job man! Protect this man at all cost. Brilliant!

  • @morganc5990
    @morganc5990 9 месяцев назад +5

    This has been a dream for my husband and me. We're finally ready to make that dream a reality! We're going to look at an off grid property thats being used as a hunting cabin. Theres minimal systems in place. Gravity fed water, but no hot water. Been checking out different options, thats what I love about the lifestyle. So many different ways to do it and you are in control of how you do it. This has to be one of the best ways I've seen so far. The tankless hot water way seems like a quick fix, but I'm not sold on still needing propane to run it. I like that this way is 100% self reliant. Thank you for sharing!

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  9 месяцев назад +2

      Awesome, so nice to hear other people pursuing their dreams!
      Glad our video could be of use to you.
      I actually did another updated video of this system as well, you might want to check it out too.

  • @jamespayne8781
    @jamespayne8781 2 года назад +56

    Used to live in an old farm house that had what I think was called a range boiler or piping through the fire box of a wood fired cook stove. The old galvanized tank was in a small room directly behind the wall where the range was set. The principal of course being the cook stove was in service all year round so there was always some hot water in the tank. The system wasn’t in service anymore but all the piping and tank were still there. Even as a kid I found the idea intriguing. Today I’m off grid in the high desert so I use solar for hot water. Works pretty well. One thing caught my eye in your system and that’s the possibility of insulating your coil. Something I’ve used around stove pipe is header wrap. You may have seen it used on custom motorcycle exhaust where there’s no provided heat shield. It’s fire proof to very high temperature and last a very long time. However it’s expensive even in small rolls. In my solar system I found I needed to insulate nearly every exposed pipe to bring the performance up to desired levels. Every part of the system is radiating heat all day and night so radiant heat loses can really cause problems. Most of my system is wrapped with felt insulation. It keeps me from getting burned on the copper pipe when I’m doing my inspections. It’s takes surprisingly little insulation to mitigate the losses. Great video.

    • @scottmcintosh2988
      @scottmcintosh2988 2 года назад +6

      Solar water heater on the roof gives you domestic hot water 3 seasons

    • @jamespayne8781
      @jamespayne8781 2 года назад +6

      @@scottmcintosh2988 ah…yes. But this is the desert. Winter here is almost always clear an cold. Solar works equally well in winter as in summer. One of the trade offs for several months of cooking hot weather in the summer.

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  2 года назад +6

      Great ideas thank you

    • @jamesking5636
      @jamesking5636 2 года назад

      ³333

    • @starchild2121
      @starchild2121 2 года назад +3

      @@jamespayne8781 can you have a recommend a video for the shower heater setup? Planning to go off grid soon too. Thanks!

  • @rebeccajohnson4232
    @rebeccajohnson4232 2 года назад +36

    Glad to see the kids working along side!

  • @terrygabriel5945
    @terrygabriel5945 2 года назад +83

    Great concept, a convection hot water recirculation system. The only thing I would change are the pex lines from your heat exchanger coiled around your stove pipe to the hot water storage tank. You will find that these pex pipe will get soft and less ridgid as they are not designed to be hot all the time. I would recommend to continue the lines from the heat exchanger to the hot water tank in either a copper pipe type L or K and try to avoid using type M as it has a thinner pipe wall and is not appropriate for a recirculation system. You should also try to use brass or copper nipples and fittings for domestic water rather then galvanized fittings. Keep up the good work.

    • @jcarney1987
      @jcarney1987 2 года назад +6

      I do HVAC Mechanical, and when we do Geothermal systems, we often tie them into the hot water system to improve efficiency of hot water. We normally run copper lines, but I know plumbing code allows you to run pex all the way with no problem and that's on a re-circulation pump. Never heard of an issue where they have failed from being hot on the time. Only failures I know of is when they don't position the pex ring crimp properly .

    • @terrygabriel5945
      @terrygabriel5945 2 года назад +12

      @@jcarney1987 essentially yes you can run pex for heating but there is pex specifically for heating and pex specifically for domestic water. I made my comment because I can almost guarantee that the pex he was using was for domestic water use only and it was also insufficiently supported, and when insufficiently supported it will sag due to the heat of the water and as well being near the heat source. I don’t take chances nor do I think people should take chances when it comes to potential water damage.

    • @michaelg.294
      @michaelg.294 2 года назад +6

      Using pex in this way is fine as long as you support it properly. The only difference between heating and potable pex is the heat pex has an oxygen barrier which prevents air from leaching through the plastic and into your boiler system, which can cause rust and other issues not ideal for heating systems.

    • @bodyzoasispersonaltraining9186
      @bodyzoasispersonaltraining9186 2 года назад +4

      I thought that 2. Copper for the longterm

    • @ubroc
      @ubroc 2 года назад +4

      @@terrygabriel5945 When the PEX softens does it leach BPH into the water?

  • @tomkelly8827
    @tomkelly8827 2 года назад +7

    This looks like a good system that you can make quite easily but if you want more hot water, I would recomend putting just one or two loops inside the firebox. I have that in my Pioneer Princess wood cookstove and it is tremendous! I have too much heat for just hot water so I have a heat exchanger to bring that extra heat to heat my hydronic cement floor. It makes the whole house so much warmer and more comfortable without burning any extra wood.

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  2 года назад

      Those are great stoves!

    • @BooDamnHoo
      @BooDamnHoo 10 месяцев назад

      What about summer? Myself I could see a setup like this working well for us in the winter when we are burning wood to (supplementally) heat the house, but summer is a whole different deal. Any extra heat in the house is unwelcome. Very warm (and humid) here. I'd be thinking a mixed system for where we live: passive solar water heat in summer and wood burning in the winter.

  • @haydnwilde
    @haydnwilde 2 года назад +31

    Good to see you having a go. Do not use galvanised steel pipe material for water, especially hot water (heating water drives the oxygen out of the of the water and it then combines with iron; rust) and any copper in the system will create a reaction to corrode the iron quickly.

    • @joeharvie8362
      @joeharvie8362 2 года назад +1

      A dielectric couple between the dissimilar materials would prevent that galv. Nipple from closing up in two or three years .

    • @haydnwilde
      @haydnwilde 2 года назад +7

      @@joeharvie8362 I hope your right Joe. My experience was to never put steel into fresh hot water (oxygen leaves heated water and combines with steel. Zinc will give very short term protection). The electrical potential difference between dissimilar metals in a water service is another issue that needs to be dealt with (dielectric separation is difficult with fresh hot water flowing between dissimilar metals). None of this is a problem if you can easily swap out parts as they fail. (I am just an old plumber thinking a bit of brass all thread and brass tee would have been the go). Heating water using thermosyphon is good. But great care is required when using a "Uncontrolled heat supply" for the heat. One should not use plastic pipework (PEx). I do not know at what pressure you will have your hot water system operating at. To give an example if the water pressure is 50 psia. at sea level the water temp can/will reach 281degrees F. Their is a real danger of scolding without temp control devices fitted and of non metal pipework failure, particularly between heat and storage and between storage and temp control device(s).

  • @andrewczuba498
    @andrewczuba498 2 года назад +22

    ingenius! My friend , who has passed away now, was a bit older than me, and he told me how his family's house was heated with coal thru WW2 in into the 1950's. and they had an "ice box" until the early 1960's. They had a similar system for hot water and that was considered luxury ! nice job!!! thx from New England USA.

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  2 года назад +4

      interesting. Our other home we lived at had coal heating. but it was pretty luxurious. You can watch that video and see that set up was neat.

  • @practicalman45
    @practicalman45 2 года назад +30

    I so enjoyed seeing your kids helping you moving the tanks, too. What a great family!
    Your system looks good, and I enjoyed watching you work with the pex (a technology I'd like to get familiar with). As a welder fabricator, I make wood stoves as well as stainless steel water coils that go inside the firebox for thermosiphon heating. My place has a stove coil for in winter, as well as a passive solar (out door) collector for the summer season (that must be drained in winter to avoid freeze damage). They both thermosiphon to the same storage tank (which is a standard electric water heater with the thermostats set low, but still there as backup). The HOT outlet from the storage tank should have a "thermostatic tempering valve" on it. These are common in solar systems and mix hot and cold together to prevent dangerously hot water from going to your home's fixtures. Also, your heating coil, being in the lowest part of your water heating system, would be great place to add a T and a drain valve for servicing, sediment flushing, or draining to avoid freezing damage in case you might ever be away and your home be freezing?. Don't forget a T&P relief valve somewhere on that hot side, too. It is good to have them plumbed to a drain because it is quite possible they might forcefully dump boiling hot water sometime. And NEVER have shutoff valves on both sides of that heating coil to insure they never get both accidently closed risking a steam explosion!
    I've enjoyed your video and am adding my subscription.

  • @user-lx8pn6jy9y
    @user-lx8pn6jy9y 7 месяцев назад +4

    Добро пожаловать в Россию 😘. Вы прекрасная семья !

  • @shakespeare_hall4788
    @shakespeare_hall4788 2 года назад +5

    Great video!
    1 small tip!
    Maybe at the beginning you could give a quick explanation as to how the hot water rises and takes itself out into the storage tank and also the siphon effect!
    Just for those peeps who may not be familiar with this idea!
    Thanks for posting!

    • @johnfox9780
      @johnfox9780 7 месяцев назад

      Liquids and gasses become less dense as they get warmer. They are displaced upwards by colder more dense liquid or gas. That's it!
      I always remember a lecturer at college telling us that hot air balloons do not rise of their own accord. They are displaced upwards by colder more dense air around them.
      As has been mentioned in this thread. The thermosyphon effect is very fragile that is why they were always piped up these primaries using 1" Dia pipework.......depending upon the vertical distance between the stove and the hot water cylinder. (In the UK we call these two flow and return pipes the primaries) Doing a job like this, I would probs wrap 3/4 annealed copper tube round flue, and then reduce up to 1" for the primary pipework to upstairs. Thermosyphon will go like a steam train. Also pull one or two heat sink radiatiors off the primaries for free heat and a means to get rid of the heat if you're generating too much. If steam pockets form in the primaries, (which they can and often) they make a horrendous noise, as the steam pockets rattle up the pipework. Last point, this primary system on a solid fuel stove should be atmospheric, ie there should be an open vent on the system. Failing that, there should be an expansion vessel and a pressure safety valve (PSV). Otherwise you just built a bomb!
      My credentials.....Served a 4 yr apprenticeship as a plumber/heating eng many years ago. Kept studying. Now a Chartered Engineer with 2 degrees and a Master's in Engineering.
      Self built last two family homes and loved it! Dying to do it again. 🙂

  • @SoaringThunder2024
    @SoaringThunder2024 7 месяцев назад +1

    Awesome. It reminds me of Great grandparent's wood burning Cook stove, it had a copper tank attached on the right side, it held about 25 gallons of warm water. You just had to fill it with fresh water as needed. The stove had a door that you opened, that had the spout with open & close nozzle. Always had hot or warm water as needed. totally off the grid.

  • @RJNehlen73
    @RJNehlen73 2 года назад +3

    Awesome to see a family doing away with the system.

  • @deathtotruthers1
    @deathtotruthers1 7 месяцев назад +1

    Growing up my family had that exact same stove! Cool to see!

  • @mikehitchcock707
    @mikehitchcock707 2 года назад +4

    Dude, I am inspired by your videos.. & I'm a single guy who bought 5-acres in beautiful northwestern Wisconsin where I am planning to assemble a shipping container cottage.. actually, 2-side-by-side 20ft containers.. with an A-frame 2nd floor master bed & bath w/tub.. downstairs has small living, dining, kitchen & shower & bath & cozy bedroom/den.. it's not tiny living but, very cozy & to allow affordability.. steel roof, one skylight painted all black & resembles an A-frame cuz, 2nd floor roof is steep.. dimensions:20×16.. & there is a bump out in the dining area w/like window box seating to enjoy morning coffee, etc.
    All this placed on a concrete block half buried 20×16 cellar/one car garage & work bench/utility room.. if ya can Invision this on a sloping mature wooded couple acres that overlook tiny reflection pond & marsh couple acres.. on a very secluded rural road.. this will be my retirement ace & I got 10yrs to do it.. now that I envision it.. I need a sketch & get a local tech school to do a student architecture design on paper for next steps to begin.. power install from road-(150ft away)-grade the plot area where cellar foundation needs be & then the well-(sand point or, what.. I dunno yet)-& septic options.. I've seen people do the own upon ordering what is needed?.. lots to think about.. I'll be watching all your videos & I do want my property to have back-uo which is off grid.. southern expose & lots of facing windows on 2nd story A-frame type design allows much heat absorbtion & an efficient wall mount wood stove in living room w/open grate in curling above for heat rise to upstairs all outta be good ideas to help with heat.. I'll send some pics if ya got an email(?).. love to bounce idea off ya.
    Land is paid for & I got a tiny shed/cabin purchased too for weekend stay overs while clearing property of fallen trees, etc etc
    Wish me well.. I wanna do it all for $50,000 & I do most labor w/no mortgage.. let's see if I can do it.. I want most in place by 2025 & finish the details by 2030 when I turn 60 & wanna retire

  • @albrighttopover
    @albrighttopover 2 года назад +2

    Hello, it's great to get warm water fir showeer out from the woodstove, it is more efective and confortise to put a radiator too heat rhe bathroom in the heat cirkulation, so you have a warm Room and warm water together and a high quality of lifetime with your young family. Wish all luck and never has steam in your hoses! Take good care.

  • @SeanInAlaska
    @SeanInAlaska 3 года назад +8

    Great idea! Ya know...I bet you could rig a toilet bowl float to operate as a switch to automatically transfer water from the bins to the main bin of water.

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  3 года назад +2

      Not a bad idea, I do plan to hook them all together via the pipe at the bottom though. That way I wont need any power to move the water it will just gravity feed over.

  • @SnowingNapalm
    @SnowingNapalm 2 года назад +6

    also beware to clean the cooled part of your chimney more often due to condensating the woodgass creasote tar etc it's where the deposits should build up in system but totally safe when unignored meaning a regular maintenance plan. i applaud you for your greenness 💚 alternative energy solutions and self sufficiency

    • @NickFrom1228
      @NickFrom1228 2 года назад +2

      Since it is right next to the wood stove, and that the heat was already radiating into the air, it's likely that this won't be an issue, especially if creosote remover is used regularly. But you make a good point, flue temperature is an important thing to consider.

  • @michaelbeggs2013
    @michaelbeggs2013 3 года назад +4

    when I was growing up in the 80s we had this in a different form. It would heat the water to 130. Superinsulate your tank! it helps.

  • @smacpost3
    @smacpost3 2 года назад +3

    I think you're doing an awesome job, your kids are lucky to have such great parents. All the best to you, and yours. Thanks for this great idea.

  • @marilynfdavis891
    @marilynfdavis891 3 года назад +24

    Your house is coming together & I’m excited to see the comfort & necessary projects coming along. Love your videos! Blessings to you!

  • @thouartit
    @thouartit 2 года назад

    In the 70's, I built thermo siphon system with in stove 3/4" black pipe - 15' around inside of fire box. I way over built it .
    In winter when the stove cranked, if we did not use the
    hot water enough, the system would blow. I plumbed the relief valve to the side of the house on second floor. It would shoot steam out. The H2O was gravity feed, so we often had to run hot water right down the drain to keep system from blowing.
    The tank was re-purposed electric tank 50 gal. The following year I installed small RV pump and ran hot water through a couple radiators and reduced from 3/4" to 1/2" black pipe and cut in half length of run inside stove to 6'.
    That finally gave us just enough heat and steam blowing stopped.

  • @I_must_get_a_van
    @I_must_get_a_van 2 года назад +20

    Well done, I loved the video. I use those water tanks for irrigation purposes. One tank for the roof inlet and the other 2 are connected with 13mm flexible pipe. They all gradually come to the same height. It was easy to drill near the base of each tank and attach the fittings. Cheers from Melbourne Australia

  • @infoman5512
    @infoman5512 Год назад +1

    Thanks sharing your experience, it's a great help. Be bless you and your family.

  • @moepow8160
    @moepow8160 2 года назад +3

    That works like my solar heaters on my roof. They heat up in coming cold water, dumping it into hotwater heater then the gas only has to heat the water to optimum temperature unless the solar water can keep the whole tank hot. That happens in summer. Winter it needs gas assist. We still save a lot. I would want to coil the whole exshust pipe to maximize my hot water intake. A lot of heat goes up that pipe! But great job. I like the cool look.

  • @crushthis123
    @crushthis123 2 года назад +1

    Nice i know the containers well I built several sizes of molds for different chemicals and food products at Bynne ans Short sheet metal molds in Lindsay Ont. I have no room and think ill bury a cement septic tank and 4 inches of foam insulation all round. Think ill put my asphalt over it so I dont have to shovel snow around my car or a garden over top of the tank so it warms up in spring

  • @reeblesnarfle4519
    @reeblesnarfle4519 2 года назад +3

    Ingenious! Brilliantly laid out. Great concept, I love it!!!

  • @Backwoodboys23
    @Backwoodboys23 7 месяцев назад +1

    Nice idea I’ll deff keep this in mind.. luv the journey!

  • @mydogma7116
    @mydogma7116 2 года назад +3

    Awesome helpers

  • @Hirokiji
    @Hirokiji 2 года назад +1

    Obviously, your plumbing is all done and dusted. But for the sake of maintaining good hot water pressure, you could have reduced the number of elbows used in your ceiling and wall cavities and just curved the pipe. I don't remember the % of pressure loss an elbow gives but added up is significant on 1/2 or 3/4 pipe.
    Ingenius idea to wrap your pipe around the stove flue. Like the old days and works a treat.

  • @tonyd4346
    @tonyd4346 2 года назад +13

    Totally awesome! I googled a diagram of the piping. I would think an expansion tank would be needed being that that stove can get real hot! Wondering if that’s been an issue at all? Also, I bet you can incorporate a coil on the roof for summer water heating when you don’t want to be running that stove.

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  2 года назад +17

      Yes we plan to build and add a solar hot water coil this summer.
      So far an expansion tank has not been needed, we have a relief valve in the system but the whole thing has run flawlessly for 1.5 years now

    • @marksexton1340
      @marksexton1340 2 года назад +4

      You only need an expansion tank if there's a check valve or backflow...which would make it a closed system. An open system the expansion will go back into the source....

    • @jimdarby1968
      @jimdarby1968 2 года назад

      I think you appreciate that if you fill the heating coil with water and close the valves at the inlet and outlet the pressure will rise and could burst your coil due to thermal expansion of the liquid or pressure generation when the system is partially filled. If not, please ensure thos doesn't happen or ensure your relief valve is connected to the right place and is sized for the worst case scenario.

    • @marksingle582
      @marksingle582 2 года назад

      @@countrysideacreshomestead2008 did you post a diagram of the entire water system?

    • @rupe53
      @rupe53 2 года назад +1

      @@marksexton1340... the source is an electric pump with a check valve holding pressure. The pressure drop of opening a faucet is what starts the pump. What we seems to be working with here is the flex of all the plastic pipe as the expansion tank.

  • @fvrrljr
    @fvrrljr 2 года назад

    Photovoltaic / Solar Thermal Technician here. I Love the wood stove set up. they also make DC powered heating element for water heaters hooked up to one solar panel. I applaud you and wish you many warm and cozy time with the family *i Like, OLE'!* 💃

  • @beaner2907
    @beaner2907 2 года назад +8

    This is great! I was just contemplating my future in this world that's getting crazier by the day and thinking I'm in a good position to sell my home and go off grid, leaving society in the rear view. And then your video popped up, like a sign. So here I am, subscribed and ready to learn how it's done. I've learned so much already just from this one video. You give hope to people like myself who don't have the first clue about how it all goes together. So thank you for that. All the best!

  • @cuteone1702
    @cuteone1702 2 года назад

    Thanks for ending the video with the final results. Great job! ….the final final ending was even better showing the little tyke 👍😃

  • @yfdfireman2
    @yfdfireman2 2 года назад +6

    Outstanding video and there are some great tips about corrosion as well. From a burn safety standpoint with young children, I would suggest looking into something called a thermostatic mixing valve. It hooks into the hot and cold lines and it mixes the water to a temperature you set at the valve. The hotter the water heater output the more cold it mixes to keep the desired temperature. That way you know the kids are protected no matter what the tank temperature it. Good luck.

  • @w.p.3539
    @w.p.3539 2 года назад +1

    Wow great job and learned something new...Thanks Its great you have the kids helping and learning as teaching and interactions between parents and children while growing up is a lost trait these days. All the success to you and family.

  • @coyotecrossingfarm
    @coyotecrossingfarm 3 года назад +3

    Very interesting! You are making great progress!

  • @Youtubsucks5
    @Youtubsucks5 2 года назад +3

    When you solder pipes apply your heat towards the end of the fitting the solder will run towards the heat.
    You doing a great job keep up the good work young man it will all be worth it

  • @DanRich01
    @DanRich01 3 месяца назад

    Amazing, here is south africa electricity is getting more expensive by the day and we have load shedding also. Im going to give the copper coil thermo syphon effect a go as we have plenty of hard wood. Thanks for the inspiration and may you have lots of successes coming you and family's way.

  • @OldReddingFarm
    @OldReddingFarm 3 года назад +5

    That's a great project !!

  • @tirboglove
    @tirboglove 2 года назад +1

    Love it... just brought me memories, as 20 years ago I did in Romania... A heater with saw dust, which was in abundence, and exactly the same system! Thanks!

  • @jafquist27
    @jafquist27 2 года назад +4

    Great video. If you ever see this comment, I applaud your courage. I set up to do EXACTLY this, twenty years ago, in North Dakota. Unfortunately, after a little deeper research, I became afraid of the potential pressure problems and, not knowing the science behind it all, I thought I'd play it safe and never fired up the contraption. I wish I had. I knew it would heat my water, I just wasn't sure I knew enough to not blow up my hot water tank. I will be doing some experimentation in the next year or two, using both the copper coil and the passive solar loop.

    • @lagunafishing
      @lagunafishing 2 года назад +2

      Shame you didn't ever fire it up. You could easily have fitted a safety valve for the pressure build up.

    • @sometea4741
      @sometea4741 2 года назад

      Yes agreed..this type of fired water tank setup is not complete without that additional pressure valve

  • @littlegriffoffgridalberta6837
    @littlegriffoffgridalberta6837 7 месяцев назад

    Awesome job ! You have to love that hot water System :) I never thought of that when I built, I use the 40 gallon tank as well but mine is propane fired, With a family it would take a 100 pound tank a month, My RV pump like your pulls water from my well under the cabin, I have fully operational Off grid cabin :)

  • @stanley1554
    @stanley1554 8 месяцев назад +5

    5:36 that is brilliant!! much love to you and your huge beautiful family, and the best of luck to you and the wonderful Russian Federation

  • @michaelleal4231
    @michaelleal4231 2 года назад

    I was thinking the same thing as far as the children helping out the old man.:) Good for the whole Familia..

  • @grdelawter4266
    @grdelawter4266 2 года назад +3

    I’m new here. I’m very concerned about your use of pex to the coil. Pex is only rated to 180°. I’m sure you are exceeding that and may have a disaster in your future as the pex degrades. Please look into it. Just because it works now doesn’t mean it won’t explode in the future. The cross link polymer will degrade over time with excess temperatures

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  2 года назад +5

      Very good comment, thank you and welcome to the channel.
      The higher the PSI in the line the lower the temperature tolerance it has. At 80 psi its good for around 200 degrees but at 45 psi its good for 250 or more.
      We actually have around 40 psi on this line and it has a pressure relieve valve on it just in case. It would be interesting to put a thermostat on the system to see how hot the water actually gets but at this point we are not worried.

  • @avflyguy
    @avflyguy 6 месяцев назад

    Had a friend that did something very similar on an old farmhouse out in the country. Huge fireplace (48" wide). Coiled up 1" copper and put on the inside brick lined chimney. Had *very* hot water in no time. The coil wasn't wound a tight together and was around 3 ' tall. Even ran some copper pipe to the bedroom with a radiator that circulated. Thought that was pretty cool.

  • @freddyg9026
    @freddyg9026 2 года назад +3

    Just stumbled upon this video and it piqued my interest as I have thought about doing something like this as an addition to my oil burning furnace in the shop for extra heat. Instead of using to heat the water I thought about putting a radiator inline as a heat exchanger, pretty sure this would work with your setup and i could use antifreeze to keep from freezing when not in use. I know you said your system is running fine but was thinking maybe could control the heat more by making the coils larger than the pipe? just a thought.

    • @Yarrb53
      @Yarrb53 2 года назад +1

      We ran glycol in a Clever Brooks fire tube dry back boiler, the glycol eventually became acidic and destroyed the copper coils in the radiators. The boiler was pretty large and the fire box ran at about 2,000 degrees. That may have been the problem.

    • @freddyg9026
      @freddyg9026 2 года назад

      @@Yarrb53 yeah never thought about glycol causing damage.

  • @desertoasiscreations
    @desertoasiscreations 2 года назад

    Beautiful children. You gave me some ideas for my homestead thanks.

  • @gabrielshirk
    @gabrielshirk 2 года назад +4

    This is cool but 1 question. Are you gonna have your wood stove burning during the summer months? If not then what can you do to get hot water?

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  2 года назад

      Some morning and nights in the summer are cool enough to run the stove but we hope to build another coil for solar water heating.

  • @melodyhopponen7504
    @melodyhopponen7504 2 года назад +1

    That is such a great idea for heating the water, awesome

  • @AngelGoodwitch
    @AngelGoodwitch 2 года назад +4

    This is so fabulous!!! Thank you so much for filming and posting :-) Question for you- How long does it take to heat back up after a long shower?

  • @matthewknight5641
    @matthewknight5641 Год назад

    I love to see a regular guy and regular family be successful with something like this. Rhanks for the video

  • @SurrealNotion
    @SurrealNotion 2 года назад +3

    It's wonderful to see people actually trying to live, learn and implement ways to live Off the Grid.
    I'm slowly getting my family there just on a different level.
    I've had many back surgeries so getting us there is taking a bit more time than originally expected..lol. We'll get there though and thanks to videos like these I get to learn more and more.
    Thank you for your time!

  • @wesman7837
    @wesman7837 6 месяцев назад

    You should add a little slow flow pump so it doesn't rely on thermal siphon, and can't steam cook off and create a problem! Otherwise that's pretty AWESOME!

  • @ElJasperino
    @ElJasperino 3 года назад +3

    So basically you turn river water into warm shower water? Do you filter the river water?
    Just tuning in to your channel, very nice!

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  3 года назад +4

      We collect a lot of rainwater as well.
      Currently we have 4000 liters of rainwater storage, when that runs low we get water from the creek.
      We only filter our drinking water.
      Thank you for joining us!

    • @dlyciousmusic
      @dlyciousmusic 2 года назад +1

      Water over 140°F kills most contaminates. If that's not good enough, he can add another preliminary tank to boil water over 212 F and kill all contaminants.

    • @dlyciousmusic
      @dlyciousmusic 2 года назад

      @@countrysideacreshomestead2008 Water over 140°F kills most contaminates. If that's not good enough, he can add another preliminary tank to boil water over 212 F then kill ALL contaminants.

  • @archangel6415
    @archangel6415 2 года назад +1

    Just picked on on your channel and was thrilled to discover you have are. Brother in Christ. May The Lord Himself bless you as a family. So proud of you efforts to build your place off grid, very brave as well as inspiring. I’m consider solar as gas is literally about to cost double! I’m a joiner/Carpenter now about to retire but with a lot of work to do before ‘going home’.
    Anyway, I pray you’ll take good care of yourself and your lovely family.
    Peter Glasgow Uk

  • @KennDewh
    @KennDewh 2 года назад +5

    Great concept and project. I had a friend years ago who created a similar hookup to heat his whole house. In your case, the hot water is only free if you're running the wood stove anyway to heat your space. What do you do when the stove doesn't need to run?

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  2 года назад +13

      Then we have no hot water unfortunately.
      We plan to build and add a solar hot water heater this year

    • @Oldaker7
      @Oldaker7 2 года назад +6

      Make you a small boiler room outside next to house using same general idea with tubing. Water tank gravity fed to 12in round casing 3.5ft long, tubing of course around casing with door at end for loading wood another for ash trap at bottom, open shut hatches are the best. Finished off with wooden enclosure plus ventilation system could merge with house furnace. Just trying to help dont take the wrong way that idea popped in my head watching this.

    • @imbrudedsoul
      @imbrudedsoul 2 года назад +1

      @@Oldaker7 that’s a good idea, I still prefer a solar heater with a heat soak as a more “free” option.

  • @kuzadupa185
    @kuzadupa185 2 года назад +1

    A man's man! Bringing hot water to your family!

  • @G58
    @G58 2 года назад +4

    Great off grid setup. Will you be wrapping the coils to make it even more efficient? Or is that not necessary?
    Also, have you considered installing a longer coil and a larger very well insulated copper hot water storage tank for during the summer when you maybe won’t have the fire lit every day, and won’t want it lit for long?
    Thank you for sharing
    Peace

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  2 года назад +8

      So far its working great without wrapping.
      I'm planning to build another coil for solar water heating. Stay tuned for that.

    • @G58
      @G58 2 года назад +2

      @@countrysideacreshomestead2008 That’s great. I look forward to seeing your next video. Subscribed.

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  2 года назад +2

      Thank you, please share

  • @Mywhtjp
    @Mywhtjp 2 года назад

    first time seeing any of your vids. The title captured my attention. Very clever. Glad it works. I subscribed because off grid is where I plan to be.. So I'm looking forward to seeing what else you've built.

  • @tWIST1up
    @tWIST1up 2 года назад +2

    things I liked about this Video : 1) peanuts are evil 2) nicely made Heat Exchanger 3)teaching a young man useful skills with simple explanations 4) Cleanliness is next to Godliness 5) a helpful and understanding family unit .... You have been Blessed young Man ... :)

  • @shawnr771
    @shawnr771 2 года назад +1

    Good video.
    Well done.
    Great explanations.
    Even detail to show the work and how it is done.

  • @lourak613
    @lourak613 2 года назад +2

    I'm sure his wife is just thrilled with this system...

  • @TINA7HEAVEN
    @TINA7HEAVEN 2 года назад

    I just found ya and subscribed 🍀Greetings some Oregon and you're living the dream. Congratulations👍

  • @joeyjennings9548
    @joeyjennings9548 2 года назад +1

    good use of a heat source that would have gone up & out. i did a small project like that on my car windshield washer back in the early 90's. wrapped the heater hose with aluminum tubing hooked it to the windshield washer hose.. in the winter it sure defrost the ice off the windshield coming out at 180°f 👍 i realized an easier way to not remove the heater hose later on by making a clam shell design to clamp over the hose and also made it hold more fluid & made it insulated 👍👍 🚘

  • @lorenroberts3042
    @lorenroberts3042 2 года назад +2

    Water heater or hot water maker not hot water heater. No need to heat hot water. 😏 Keep up the great work.
    I built something somewhat similar except I had an oil fired boiler for hydronic heat. I designed and built a non pressurized water heater with a domestic coil inside and larger coil piped into the boiler pump. Worked perfectly.

  • @petersamios5409
    @petersamios5409 Месяц назад

    A few things. 1) right angles on your lines cause you to need a bigger pump and limit flow - try and avoid if possible. 2) insulate the lines - even the cold ones. 3) insulate the coil around the stack. You are losing a lot of heat to the room.

  • @ExclusiveLM
    @ExclusiveLM 2 года назад

    Thank you so much for freeing me of monthly expensive hot water bills. You are my hero. And my family appreciates you and your family. Keep the videos coming.

  • @shanel9939
    @shanel9939 2 года назад +1

    You got a sub and the bell, as soon as I saw you were at the Freedom Rally!🇨🇦
    Support from B.C.;

  • @jamesbond0004
    @jamesbond0004 2 года назад

    real living outside the system which has so trapped us into thinking in that trapped way. i am so happy you are not trapped by the system. outside of their energy trap, their education trap, their comfort traps,.. in the end your life will be far less of the system traps, and free. we are all headed out of the system which has to crash sooner or later.
    well done.. don't give up

  • @dpz9872
    @dpz9872 2 года назад

    Love the way those kid's are helping pop's git er done.
    They'll definitely grow up with a spine. 👍

  • @Johnny53kgb-nsa
    @Johnny53kgb-nsa Год назад

    I enjoy watching a family living a self sufficient as possible lifestyle. Great job and wonderful family. Keep up the good work. John

  • @jeffcameron7853
    @jeffcameron7853 2 года назад +2

    Sweet system mate. I'm in NZ and about to set up an off grid cabin so the timing of finding your video is perfect! Great stuff!

  • @boyo6704
    @boyo6704 2 года назад

    We built our own house on the side of a mountain 20 years ago, I'm putting
    off grid power and hot water also, we already heat with wood.

  • @josephshaneferguson6561
    @josephshaneferguson6561 7 месяцев назад +1

    i hauled water for many moons ,bet your glad its done

  • @altonguis8870
    @altonguis8870 2 года назад

    Awesome, I'm proud of you! You do You! and NEVER let the negative people get to you. They are just jealous, mad at their life for how they turned out or just mean to people who succeed or smarter than them.

  • @umaxen0048
    @umaxen0048 Год назад +1

    Practical simplicity by a do it yourselfer. The copper needs to be as THIN as possible and then insulated to trap the heat onto/into the supply line. I live in Florida and have ample sunlight. I've dropped a 20 gallon flat tank onto my roof, painted it black and get 140' F water out of it INTO my garage hot water tank. When mixed with cold, it gives about 35 gallons of very warm shower water, however the roof tank reheats in about 15 minutes of sunlight. Everyone should do this...

  • @stihlnz
    @stihlnz 2 года назад

    In New Zealand we call a similar system a "wet back" its a box or tube installed in the back of the fire box. As long as the fire is going well (a rolling fire) it will heat the 400 litre water cylinder just through the wall and during the winter wet get free hot water. Put lagging on the copper tubing heading away from the fire, it will keep it hot on its way to the cylinder. Well done

  • @DCJNewsMedia
    @DCJNewsMedia 2 года назад +1

    Ty so much for sharing...your awesome and amazing God-bless you and your family 👪 ❤️ ✝️
    Brother Daymond

  • @morningglory131
    @morningglory131 2 года назад

    What a great video. Thanks for sharing your talents with us. God bless.

  • @juanpierrebosch
    @juanpierrebosch 2 года назад

    Love your Lifestyle, your mindset and teaching your children Lifeskils second to non. Keep being the light others seek. Peace, Love and Respect j

    • @countrysideacreshomestead2008
      @countrysideacreshomestead2008  2 года назад +1

      Thank you, feel free to check out more of our videos on our channel and please share

    • @juanpierrebosch
      @juanpierrebosch 2 года назад

      @@countrysideacreshomestead2008 will do champ just found you and will join your adventures :) ' Be the reason for someone to believe in the goodness of people ' cheers j

  • @skiimountaineer
    @skiimountaineer 2 года назад

    I also have a thermo syphon for my wood stove , I put 20 ft of 3/4" copper inside the wood stove! We make so much hotwater I had to make a dump zone to keep the water from getting to hot and blowing the TRV , with the use of a aquastat I send the extra heat to a 4 season porch.

  • @barbarianleatherandblades8686
    @barbarianleatherandblades8686 2 года назад

    Nice project. I mite suggest a heat shield for the pex pipe. But as I always say if it's for free it's for me!

  • @starwizardmanonthestarwiza2469
    @starwizardmanonthestarwiza2469 2 года назад

    Thank you for the value of your time I was thoroughly entertained and I want to know more.

  • @mrmcclung
    @mrmcclung 2 года назад

    Looks good, the only suggestion I can see is moving the TnP to the top of the tank (so it senses properly), You could add a second on top adjusted for 130°-135° to return to cold supply tank.. there are plenty of videos ( & old movies) that show what happens to brick/wood homes if they overtemp.. (a valve on either side of the coil & oneto drain it, could be another option for when hot water is not needed,, but heat is.. Lol
    If stove is going when valves are opened it will steam at first)...
    Stay Safe and God Bless

  • @tpaw6908
    @tpaw6908 2 года назад

    Just found your channel, we love it. HELLO from SOUTH CAROLINA MOUNTAINS. GOD BLESS AND BE SAFE AND WELL

  • @Don-sx5xv
    @Don-sx5xv 2 года назад

    Beautiful video, all of it, go kids go, heroes in action, I love it.

  • @BC27277
    @BC27277 7 месяцев назад

    You might want to put a relief bow in your copper that goes around the chimney so that it’s something becomes or damage it does not blowout steam on your family members. Great idea for free hot water.

  • @adamrussell4703
    @adamrussell4703 Год назад

    Copper tube around the chimney is called”a wet back” we used to have one in a house I lived in. Worked great only problem was the steam took the wallpaper off.

  • @patrickmulholland9332
    @patrickmulholland9332 2 года назад

    Love your ingenuity, big bag of kudos to you.

  • @stevemcdonald8809
    @stevemcdonald8809 2 года назад

    Excellent. I won't forget this one.

  • @garycampbell-or8tr
    @garycampbell-or8tr 2 месяца назад

    The Amish have used a similar system for years. They make a heatexchaner ,stainless steel, that replaces one of the firebrick in the stove.

  • @jeffkingston5585
    @jeffkingston5585 2 года назад

    🇨🇦🇨🇦 Big thumbs-up bud great ideas and video 🇨🇦🇨🇦 love the wood stove to water heater, definitely stealing that one lol 👍👍

  • @regkane-Pluvis
    @regkane-Pluvis 2 года назад

    Hi Man, I love this video you are right there, love the kids helping. good luck and stay safe. Reg

  • @jonnyd8399
    @jonnyd8399 2 года назад

    Glad people are still doin this. BTW, its endless as long as the fire is going...

  • @chipmhandle
    @chipmhandle 2 года назад

    A breath of fresh air! Thanks for sharing your life with us!