ENDLESS Hot Water for Your Home (NO ELECTRICITY)

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025

Комментарии • 276

  • @DanielsInventions
    @DanielsInventions  2 года назад +31

    Endless Hot Water for Your Home (No Electricity). This is a very cool instant hot water heater that can run off of regular cooking/vegetable oil and generate heat/hot water for your home for up to 24 hours running on a single small tank of oil. This instant hot water heater only weighs three pounds. It is very light weight and can be carried in a backpack and used in a case of power outage or emergency. Also, any water can be boiled down so that it can be used as drinking water in case of water outage. In case it is used indoors, an exhaust pipe has to be installed to vent the fumes outdoors so that the heat radiation can also be used as a source of heat. For the sake of the video, we used a small fountain pump, but a heat pump may need to be used that is designed to handle boiling water temperature.

    • @ecotopia_s.a.f.e
      @ecotopia_s.a.f.e 2 года назад +2

      Absolutely love this. Thank you so much for sharing. ✨🤩👌🏼✨🙏🏼🤍🐺🕊

    • @thedolphin5428
      @thedolphin5428 2 года назад +1

      I think ... the water pump and plastic hoses are PUSHING THE INLET COLD.

    • @Torah_Firma
      @Torah_Firma 2 года назад +3

      Why not just use a jug as gravity feed? No electricity needed.

    • @adrianotrujkicluciani9432
      @adrianotrujkicluciani9432 2 года назад

      @@thedolphin5428 ​ yeah thought the same at least it seems so if you watch the video until the end

    • @russellwilson8931
      @russellwilson8931 2 года назад

      Ŕ

  • @sameguyagain
    @sameguyagain 2 года назад +83

    If you place the water tank at the right elevation you don't need a pump to circulate the water. The heating process will do it for you.

  • @stenor
    @stenor 2 года назад +5

    Nice idea you could add a small radiator and have the water continuously flowing through, you have hot water plus also keeps you warm, maybe need a larger version of burner.

  • @brhino1017
    @brhino1017 2 года назад +10

    I would like to see this hooked up to your wood stove. I seen a guy wrap tubbing around a stove pipe and it recirculated into a hot water tank without a pump. The therapy was based on heat rising. The hot water tank sat on a shelf above the stove.

  • @bx1803
    @bx1803 2 года назад +22

    Dude use carbon felt for the wicks theyll never deteriorate.

    • @WaffleStaffel
      @WaffleStaffel 2 года назад +5

      Good tip. Robert Murray-Smith has a number of videos on using carbon felt wicks.

    • @fastbudgrower4205
      @fastbudgrower4205 2 года назад +3

      He's trying to be CHEAP,,,as it's a low cost heater I bet he knows but he's showing you the cheapest version

  • @brokensimulations
    @brokensimulations Год назад +1

    dude, sweet videos man, found your channel by accident. You are setting a great example for younger audiences, this is good. keep it up!

  • @MrSomethingLost
    @MrSomethingLost Год назад +10

    Amazing how the pastig hose changed into a copper pipe :D One question: How long can the pump resist the heat?

  • @nostalgiajuana
    @nostalgiajuana 2 года назад +25

    Man I love your inventions that you make, keep up the great work and content

    • @stuhales3151
      @stuhales3151 2 года назад +1

      Is it possible to use opposite poles of magnets to spin an alternator which can then charge batteries the same way solar and wind do? 🤔

    • @marykrenek1835
      @marykrenek1835 2 года назад

      @@stuhales3151 yes perpetual motion generators patents have been censored to protect our old petro dollar as a danger to national security. Patents should be released soon after GESARA. The trick is how to loop the trip cog. Like a spiral then an L? Crazy fb site the free energy party should have links and engineers...

  • @outdoorzee919
    @outdoorzee919 2 года назад +148

    I'm wondering how that plastic pump and plastic hose are going to hold up to the hot water when it is 220 degrees?

    • @MiguelRodriguez-nt5eq
      @MiguelRodriguez-nt5eq 2 года назад +11

      That's a great question.

    • @ranman5501
      @ranman5501 2 года назад +42

      This could easily be made into a thermal recirculating heater. No pump or plastic needed.

    • @oscarandbernie
      @oscarandbernie 2 года назад +26

      At my cabin cold goes through the 12 volt pump. Not hot! The thick plastic line runs hot from propane water heater into copper pipe under my place. Check out an RV. Same thing. Ez peasy...

    • @johnassal5838
      @johnassal5838 2 года назад +19

      Yeah it looks like he's putting hot side flow through that cheap pump which isn't going to work much longer than this demo. It's smarter to skip the bucket for anything other than melting snow or heating a sand battery and just circulate water between the copper coil and an automotive oil cooler or small radiator maybe with a built in dc fan. Mount the radiator somewhere just inside any accessible window and leave the fire outside. The water coming back to the pump should be significantly cooler. Could be the basis of a sweet little emergency heater. Would've saved a bunch of busted pipes in Texas a while back. Some lives too.
      Edit: if anyone does try putting the heater outside/radiator inside it would be smart to add a relief valve or just an open line to atmosphere splitting off the highest part of the water loop outside. Otherwise a steam burp can cause that radiator cap to blow off scalding steam at someone inside the space you're warming or an oil cooler might explode in an otherwise sealed loop. At least the way it's set up in the vid the open bucket serves as a relief.

    • @icandivideos5743
      @icandivideos5743 2 года назад +1

      I wondered about all this too

  • @yamlcase230
    @yamlcase230 2 года назад +3

    Now THAT's some good hobo ingenuity right there

  • @travisk5589
    @travisk5589 2 года назад +1

    This simple invention could revolutionize the world's shortage of hot water in 3rf world countries. I see a future where every home has one of these. Amazing

    • @Teknopottu
      @Teknopottu 2 года назад

      Take a look at the pipes at different shots. When he puts snow in the bucket, there is a plastic pipe. In other shot, both pipes are copper. Bet the cheap pump did not survive the heat through the demo either and the water we see circulating is just thermal ciphoning. Stole this idea from other comments.

  • @robertpieper1438
    @robertpieper1438 2 года назад +3

    This is very cool. Carbon fabric is a better wick for sure but you have n amazing water heater. Can you apply this to create a hot tub ??? You have a multi million dollar idea here! Cudos to you!!!

  • @shropshirehistory908
    @shropshirehistory908 Год назад +5

    You don’t need a pump! If you put the tank at the right height you can eliminate the pump as gravity and thermo-syphoning will move the hot water up the pipe….

  • @flatout5815
    @flatout5815 2 года назад +2

    Was thinking of a bigger design that runs off an indoor woodstove, only issue I could think of is how all my pex and pvx lines would need to be swapped for copper to handle such hot water flowing through the lines.
    Though there are other designs used for this to work, like a system that mixes the how water with well water from the blatter right after it comes out of the hot water reservoir so it brings the hot water back down to a normal hot water heaters temperature range, so all the pvc(plastic) lines already installed can stay.
    Plus to have pressure to the hot water system it needs to be tied together with the house main in some kind of setup.
    If already using firewood to heat our homes during the winters this would give us free hot water all winter. All year if you want to have an outdoor woodstove for summers. Starting an indoor woodstove for hot water when it's 90F outdoors sounds like a bad idea 😂

  • @CJ58631
    @CJ58631 2 года назад +1

    I’d love to see a video on geothermal ground heating with hot water and some type of recirculating pump system such as this for a greenhouse application

  • @yeagerxp
    @yeagerxp 2 года назад

    Good idea, now combine this with your ENDLESS Heat for Your Home WITHOUT Electricity 2.0,. Use use the thermal siphoning principle, no pump. Well done . Informative 👍👍👍. Thank you for sharing. Be safe🇨🇦

    • @Teknopottu
      @Teknopottu 2 года назад

      Take a look at the pipes at different shots. When he puts snow in the bucket, there is a plastic pipe. In other shot, both pipes are copper. Bet the cheap pump did not survive the heat through the demo either and the water we see circulating may be just thermal ciphoning. Stole this idea from other comments.

    • @yeagerxp
      @yeagerxp 2 года назад

      @@Teknopottu He seems like a young guy, a teenager. At least he is trying, and not bitching about things like many others. His heaters are doable and should work nicely, unlike the clay pot heaters. What a joke

    • @Teknopottu
      @Teknopottu 2 года назад

      @@yeagerxp Why the hate? Pointing out things not working and stuff that could work better should benefit everyone, young or mature.
      Sometimes people are trying to mislead other people with something that does not work as is and many times it seems it is because of views and subscribers. Bitching about things like this may not be okay for everyone but it does not have to be.
      Clay pot heaters work at certain level. Nothing miraculous and surely nothing to heat your entire home with. Maybe something to give you local extra heat source and to re-use scavenged materials.

  • @Jonni55106
    @Jonni55106 2 года назад +9

    You could use a hot water recirculating water pump. Taco pumps makes a few models that would work.
    I'd also switch to pex pipe instead of vinyl tubing or better just go copper all the way around.

    • @yamlcase230
      @yamlcase230 2 года назад +1

      Something tells me Taco pumps might blow the budget for this YOLO contraption lol

  • @WaffleStaffel
    @WaffleStaffel 2 года назад +4

    Fantastic work, great video, as usual. Just a tip, it's just a "water heater". _"Hot water heater"_ is a redundancy, sort of like _"ATM machine"_ Again, awesome job. As someone else commented, you really could go into production with your projects, you have the channel traffic, and people would buy your stuff.

    • @rrbernhardt5810
      @rrbernhardt5810 2 года назад

      I agree with you, WaffleStaffel.

    • @WaffleStaffel
      @WaffleStaffel 2 года назад +1

      @@jdrhea6712 I'm not picking on the kid, he's great, it's just basic English. You won't find either in the dictionary, go ahead, look. There is "hot-water heating", but that refers to hydronic heating systems.

    • @marykrenek1835
      @marykrenek1835 2 года назад +2

      I think he means crazy super duper totally hot free water in 5 mins

  • @Erickthedreamgiver
    @Erickthedreamgiver 2 года назад +1

    You can use a populator and And create a thermal siphon So you don't need a pump

  • @rubenruvalcaba3175
    @rubenruvalcaba3175 Год назад +1

    Cool👍
    My water heater doesn't use electricity either. It a
    Bradford White 50 gallon

  • @GeoHew
    @GeoHew 2 года назад +2

    Great work, I wonder if you couldn't improve by working out a return that would not require a pump using heat/cold to get things to move

    • @yeagerxp
      @yeagerxp 2 года назад +1

      You can use the thermal siphoning principle, no pump, heat up up water for purification and warm up food at same time

  • @creativenature899
    @creativenature899 4 месяца назад

    This is awesome 👌🏼 nice work! I wonder if you could attach a stainless steel water tank that could store the hot water and then recirculate back through the heater.

  • @columlynch4229
    @columlynch4229 2 года назад +1

    Am elevated water tank with an expansion release valve for safety will eliminate the pump and increase running efficiency. I love the setup and with a little more tinkering, this is an excellent idea 💡.

  • @FinlayDaG33k
    @FinlayDaG33k Год назад +3

    >No electricity
    >"A small 12V DC water pump can be used that can run on a 12V battery"
    Last time I checked, a 12V DC water pump still uses electricity...

  • @gordtron
    @gordtron 2 года назад +2

    very cool. should combine this into your ammo can furnace.

  • @6.5x55
    @6.5x55 2 года назад

    Yeah that Lexan/acrylic door looks like a great idea 😉

  • @danielkutcher5704
    @danielkutcher5704 2 года назад +6

    I discovered the Kelly Kettle water boiler that only needs sticks, scrap wood, or even grass. I bought one of each size because they are such an awesome SHTF survival tool. Check them out.

    • @Blazer-fp8fo
      @Blazer-fp8fo Год назад

      I use one camping all the time. They are great. Surprising how fast they heat water too.

  • @AB-C1
    @AB-C1 2 года назад +1

    Nice job. Is there any need for a pump? Usually with these types of systems the heat of the water itself creates the pump effect creating circulation of the water? 👍🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧

  • @tranxformations
    @tranxformations 2 года назад +1

    Just a thought but from a log burner you have a flue to roof. Could a coil like this shown in a flue be placed so that the secondary heat leaving the flue heats the water into a water tank next to the log burner. Is that a convection system? Then whilst using the log burner you have a dedicated hot water system?

    • @ecotopia_s.a.f.e
      @ecotopia_s.a.f.e 2 года назад +3

      As long as the coil intake is lower than output then yes, and it doesn’t need a pump. ✨👌🏼✨🙏🏼🤍🐺🕊

  • @pavlokhomiakivskyi3221
    @pavlokhomiakivskyi3221 Год назад

    thats really good idea for radiant floor heater, or basement floors or for garadge driveways(to keep them clearo of snow&ice) just need to find good placement for unit outdoor( to be safe from fire and humes)

  • @warwick3805
    @warwick3805 2 года назад

    Back in the early 50s, all we had for a shower is what you show, an old copper for doing the washing and such.

  • @Truthhammer711
    @Truthhammer711 2 года назад +1

    Good job. How would you connect this next to the hot water tank in the house in case of an emergency

    • @tacitus_
      @tacitus_ 2 года назад +5

      Do not do that unless you know what you're doing. You could get seriously hurt.
      Just add the hot water in the bucket to the cold water in your tub manually.

    • @marykrenek1835
      @marykrenek1835 2 года назад +1

      Your water bucket should have a side dispense nozzle. Otherwise I believe either a pump or like the old toilets a gravitational flush.

    • @utubeape
      @utubeape 2 года назад

      your hot water system in a house is closed and under pressure, so there is a risk of explosion

  • @philiptexter1789
    @philiptexter1789 2 года назад +1

    I think you may be able to delete the pump. With copper tubing..Go from bottom of hot water reservoir to flame coil ..that discharges to the top of the hot water reservoir.. the heat causes pressure and that will push your fluid..like a coffee maker. I think.this is the thermosyphon effect?. U will probably have slugs instead of Constant flow. But u may be able to eleimate the bottleneck of the upper pump te.perature limit...speaking of bottleneck, it may be a good idea to put a valve at the bottom of the hot water res..limit the amount of water gets to the coil...allow u to adjust how much ur heating with constant flame.

  • @countrychaos69
    @countrychaos69 Год назад

    I was thinking about doing something similar with this but at a smaller scale using a candle inside of a tin can with a little door so the candle can't fall out and the copper coil inside as well, using a portable cooler as the reservoir to hold and keep the water hot longer and attaching the copper pipes to the water pump in the same way but add a heater core from a car with a fan behind it for heating a room in the house! Thinking it should work and shouldn't get any hotter than 150F might even be less but as long as it's putting out 110 120F that's plenty hot enough to heat a room in no time at all!

  • @natalialavie8720
    @natalialavie8720 4 месяца назад

    looks so good! but, i dont get it, dont the baby wipes just consume and fade? do you soak them in vegetable oil first and then fire them up? i guess this is not meant to work like for an hour right?

  • @jeffreybresnahan
    @jeffreybresnahan Год назад

    You could link up the heaters flow and return pipes to a larger insulated 20 - 30 gallon water butt/container for a better volume of hot water storage?
    The water pump would provide the circulation, or even thermal convection to the water butt?

  • @woodworks2123
    @woodworks2123 2 года назад +2

    You know something like this would be awesome connected to a central heating radiator and the water pumped through the radiator to create a very cheap heater, Perhaps with candle wax and many wicks or bioethanol as it's clean burning.

  • @pt2575
    @pt2575 2 года назад +2

    Ingenious ! Thank you.

  • @rrbernhardt5810
    @rrbernhardt5810 2 года назад +5

    Very clever! Where are you getting the customized oven glass, and how are you drilling holes in it for your hinge?

    • @AmandaDragmire
      @AmandaDragmire Год назад

      thats not oven glass- it's just a heat resistant plastic placed 3" or more from an open flame.

    • @rrbernhardt5810
      @rrbernhardt5810 Год назад

      @@AmandaDragmire HAHA, I think you're right. Thanks!

  • @dwdanby1
    @dwdanby1 4 месяца назад

    I would like to know the cost of using this for a year versus cost of using just house power to do it. I'd need to know so I can keep my budget down.

  • @SmallVansBigWorld
    @SmallVansBigWorld Год назад

    Very clever. How long do you think that pump will last with that hot water. It would be cool to see if you can do a pump less system and let the water circulate from hot water rising.

    • @ScooterMcAwesomeness
      @ScooterMcAwesomeness 9 месяцев назад

      In theory, if the feed water into the pump is cool enough, pump will have no issues. Once you've "used all the heat" for heating, the water is still toasty, cooling it down with a radiator or thermal dump will prolong pump life.
      Take care, stay safe.
      Edit: damn, my point, yes! I concur with your idea of thermal currents to pump water in small scale.

  • @Tokemon72
    @Tokemon72 Год назад

    Hello, Great video. can you please tell me what type of pump your using! Thank you.

  • @RTDLSlotRacingClub
    @RTDLSlotRacingClub 2 года назад +1

    Awesome idea , what I see confirms for me an idea I have but wasn’t to sure if it might be possible as it’s in my head , I have drawn it but I’m No engineer just a cook

  • @antonnicolae20
    @antonnicolae20 2 года назад

    Very nice invention, congratulations! I like it, but i have one small question, why does it say no electricity? You can’t power the pump without electricity. Maybe you can find something that cand make your water flow 100% without electric current

    • @Zeero3846
      @Zeero3846 Год назад

      He mentioned a 12v battery. I don't think it's meant to be a long term solution, just enough to get by for a little while if you can't justify the cost of a more efficient system.

  • @ThatGuy1of1
    @ThatGuy1of1 Год назад

    You sir, earned my subscription!

  • @mojavedesertsonorandesert9531
    @mojavedesertsonorandesert9531 Год назад

    Awesome! Thank you for sharing your ideas...

  • @kcg7861
    @kcg7861 Год назад

    This is amazing I seen other people do it however I did know that is water pump is plastic it would have been better to get some type of rated pump for hot water maybe a metal pump that's the only thing that concerns me

  • @Mc-pp4vc
    @Mc-pp4vc 2 года назад +1

    Ditch the pump and go with hydronic convection heating 👍🏻

  • @markusmocke7371
    @markusmocke7371 8 месяцев назад

    How long will the copper pipe last, if direct fire burn on it?
    Thanks

  • @radargenta
    @radargenta 6 месяцев назад

    great job, thanks for sharing!

  • @mercedessanchez6844
    @mercedessanchez6844 2 года назад

    Thanks for everything you share!

  • @johnknightiii1351
    @johnknightiii1351 Год назад

    Now I want to see one with a potable water tank and recirculation pump to get the stored water up to temperature for a shower and an easy way to ignite and turn it off. I'm thinking of using a spark plug attached to a battery and a button to start it and use a sealed manual damper on the intake and exhaust. For bonus points use electric dampers and have them open when the pump turns on and close when it turns off.

  • @Bey_have
    @Bey_have 2 года назад

    Привет.
    Считаю что с доступностью таких технологий как 3д моделирование, 3д печать, координатная обработка, уже сегодня мы наблюдаем становление нового вида искусства: технотворчество.

  • @AlexanderHuzar
    @AlexanderHuzar Год назад

    One of the significant advances of human civilization has been the discovery of "blue flame". This is when you mix fire with enough oxygen that the flame turns blue and this is when it burns very efficiently. Simple stovetop gas burners have air mixing inlets that lead to a blue flame. Block said holes and the flame is yellow and very sooty. Cool invention though!

  • @ELOAAMinistries
    @ELOAAMinistries 2 года назад +1

    Dude why dont you have some of this stuff mass produced so I can buy it! And dont forget to the patents!!!!!! Blessings and Grace!

  • @PureElectrified
    @PureElectrified 2 года назад +5

    Just wondering, in case of power outage, how does the pump work?

    • @jonathanv5053
      @jonathanv5053 2 года назад +2

      "...a small 12v DC water pump can be used that will run on a 12v battery." A battery from a car would do in a pinch.

    • @gigmaresh8772
      @gigmaresh8772 2 года назад +1

      @@jonathanv5053 actually a 12vt from a lawn mower recharged from a very small 12vt solar panel would be more than sufficient. I know, I know . . . Most persons would not want to spend the extra $12 on a solar panel. Very inexpensive on eBay and it beats dragging out a charger . . . In fact, a heating element for an electric stove instead of the burning fire would be better. 😀

    • @jonathanv5053
      @jonathanv5053 2 года назад

      @@gigmaresh8772 Both pretty good options, and the mower battery is lighter than a car battery by far.

  • @icarus_ap
    @icarus_ap 2 года назад

    you could pump that through a radiator, so you can warm a room as the same time

  • @scottjohnson9225
    @scottjohnson9225 2 года назад +1

    If there is a power outage, how does the pump work?

    • @Zeero3846
      @Zeero3846 Год назад

      It's battery powered. It'll run out eventually, but it'll work while it's still got enough charge.

  • @dawncornwall6268
    @dawncornwall6268 2 года назад +1

    Boiling point of water is 212 F.

  • @beauxtibideaux9919
    @beauxtibideaux9919 Год назад

    how long does the 12v water pump last on one battery?

  • @jasonfelton7883
    @jasonfelton7883 2 года назад

    The design is great however I would improve upon it and only one way
    Have a secondary water tank that sits above with a water line on the top of the tank and a waterline on the bottom of the tank the top one runs to one into the heat exchanger the bottom one runs to the other end of the heat exchanger and what happens when you do this as you will get a water rotation that works with gravity as the water heats up the hot water rises to the top line in the cold water is pushed down through the bottom line and then you would just run a water faucet off the bottom of the tank so you can keep the heater outside and have the tank inside

  • @icandivideos5743
    @icandivideos5743 2 года назад +1

    How do you start and stop the unit working?

  • @doraray9964
    @doraray9964 2 года назад

    Amazing 👏 🙀 😮

  • @dannydavis7187
    @dannydavis7187 2 года назад

    I am interested what temperature the water comes out of the coil at. I'm thinking about trying to do this, but just hooking up to the plumbing and having the coil go right into a bathtub.

  • @michaelriddick7116
    @michaelriddick7116 2 года назад +1

    If you can moderate the heat down a bit you could use it to cook food sous vide style with! Thats great!

  • @N-T1856
    @N-T1856 2 года назад +1

    Hay dude, u want real challenge try to break Earnshaw's theorem of magnetic levitation. If you could stabilize a magnet using permanent magnet with any sort of arrangements, u will discover the greatest invention, this theorem is 183 years old.

  • @DTA-me3kv
    @DTA-me3kv Год назад

    You can use solar panels without batteries for DC. Not for AC. But for direct current.

  • @StealthyNomadica
    @StealthyNomadica 10 месяцев назад

    Good video 😉

  • @Ade2bee
    @Ade2bee Год назад

    Could you not mix one of the heaters that you hate your cabin with that you’ve just made into a 2.0 With this kind of heater for water, particularly if you could have the heater in the bathroom?

  • @billgross3579
    @billgross3579 2 года назад +1

    Water boils at 212 degrees F. If you've gotten the water to 220, you have steam and no water.

  • @diversity2739
    @diversity2739 2 года назад

    Thanks

  • @kallegrabowski8972
    @kallegrabowski8972 2 года назад

    Nice, but i prefer a Woodstove with a big Pot of Water 😉

  • @jacobolsen6696
    @jacobolsen6696 9 месяцев назад

    Hey Daniel! Can you invent an air/ water heater combo for my rv!?

  • @relicreapers571
    @relicreapers571 2 года назад +1

    I love it thanks. Did we know that just some magnets rotating under that copper coil just as it is would heat it up. I'd love to see a video of somebody make it. I'll buy the instructions for a hun if it's in detail and can hook it up to my existing system somehow and shot off my gas. You'll be doing the world a favor and sticking it to the slave rulers

  • @bigblue4364
    @bigblue4364 11 месяцев назад

    Poor little pump tho... those things are water cooled usually, I'm surprised it didn't self destruct tbh.

  • @danielsmorodin5478
    @danielsmorodin5478 2 года назад

    I've seen similar ideas people using this to heat others rooms in there cabin, like a boiler system

  • @roberthansen4673
    @roberthansen4673 2 года назад +1

    Lol as long as you have fuel, off grid tankless still very cool.

  • @RosaBeha
    @RosaBeha Год назад +1

    A 12 volt battery does not contain electricity?
    Ok, after your video I will change my world view. Perhaps.

  • @sealy3
    @sealy3 2 года назад +3

    At: ~ (1:50) You say 220 degrees Fahrenheit?
    I do not know what they teach in China , But the boiling point of water in Fahrenheit is 212 degrees NOT 220!
    Just saying!

  • @mshowell5457
    @mshowell5457 2 года назад

    Not explained fully, what is the plastic hose? & How does the plastic stand up to the heat? Why are there 2 copper tubing in the water? This looks like it's outside only for sure.

  • @bjnopoli
    @bjnopoli Год назад

    Well at sea level the water will never be over 212 F which is boiling point. Pretty cool. I wouldn't drink it though.

  • @freedomwoodgasandoffgridin8925
    @freedomwoodgasandoffgridin8925 2 года назад

    If the water supply is above the heat source it will autosifon. No pump is needed.

  • @subject2change313
    @subject2change313 2 года назад

    Cool video dude

  • @lnwolf41
    @lnwolf41 8 месяцев назад

    So how do you run the pump with no electricity???

  • @Svaraijt
    @Svaraijt 2 года назад

    what if water boils in the circuit?will it blast?

  • @Darrell1981
    @Darrell1981 2 года назад

    Excellent

  • @richardpaulson8954
    @richardpaulson8954 2 года назад

    Calculate the heat transfers 1. to bottom of pot and 2. to surface area of small pipe the RATE of hot water production was not shown and not that high either. see how long it takes to heat 5gal bucket from 40 to 95f , also temp control is a huge problem. Most heat xfer is not in the coil but at the top plate Also pump is unneeded as it will thermosyphen

    • @richardpaulson8954
      @richardpaulson8954 2 года назад

      Did you study real heat exchangers for instant flow water heaters, look at the huge delta temp at the exchanger is it 10 watts or 220v:*30amps? Note they're not on very long. instant heating need huge temp differences and well designed HEs

  • @Becausethearthisnotflat
    @Becausethearthisnotflat 2 года назад

    Thanksh four waching and see u next time 🤪🤪🤪🤪

  • @yuriel6691
    @yuriel6691 Год назад

    You are cooling down the smoke never put the pipe inside because watervaper will gather inside from the water in the wood and it will rust and break in a year at most

  • @SomeGuy-ez1xh
    @SomeGuy-ez1xh 2 года назад

    I was thinking a hot tub with pump on cold side plastic tubing pumped into the heater then busing the copper side to pump hot water onto the hot tib i think ill build that.

  • @dtmty
    @dtmty 2 года назад

    how do you build the glass window?

  • @El-Diablo-Blanco
    @El-Diablo-Blanco 2 года назад

    Should really upsize your pipe. The hard minerals will scale inside the copper pipe evenly leading to a catastrophic failure of the pipe.

  • @gheangel_quinn
    @gheangel_quinn 7 месяцев назад

    Great idea. I only have one thing I’d like to ask… why do you call it a “hot water heater”? You wouldn’t need a heater if the water is already hot. 😂 I imagine you just mean a “water heater”

  • @GEODAHERO
    @GEODAHERO 2 года назад

    Try carbon filter felt for the wicks

  • @bartbart1011
    @bartbart1011 5 месяцев назад

    boiling point of water is 212 °F, not 220 °F. so you would be generating steam, which is clear you are not

  • @shido641
    @shido641 2 года назад

    Your invention needs to look at cost, ease of use and accessibility. If you could somehow connect to your main water supply and have it auto switch on when the hot water tap is opened then you may have a good invention that could compete with gas geysers. I'm sure with a working proto type of that you'll be able to get a good kick starter up and running

  • @MichiganManMatt
    @MichiganManMatt 2 года назад

    The stainless steel pot is sitting on top of the stove, and the coil is heating hot recirculating water. This is heating one gallon of water, not endless hot water.

  • @chrls.3
    @chrls.3 2 года назад

    hoi Daniel....would it be possible to send some product from your websiteshop to the Netherlands...?

  • @cagedaf8806
    @cagedaf8806 11 месяцев назад

    Quick film now before the baby wipes burn up? The only way to do this and have it work is with real wick material. Because cotton baby wipes do not make perfect wicks.

  • @justaguydoingguythings2762
    @justaguydoingguythings2762 2 года назад

    Get rid of the pump and straight pipe it. It will thermosyphon and you wont need a pump