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#1
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I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide
heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. |
#2
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"TJ" wrote in message
... I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Since you need to buy the hardware, and perhaps pay someone to instal it, it is likely he will connect correctly as part of the installation process. -- Don Phillipson Carlsbad Springs (Ottawa, Canada) |
#3
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On Nov 12, 3:42*pm, TJ wrote:
I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. If you can drive it, if you can walk it, the Honda snow blower with tank treads will blow it alot cheaper than heating the great outdoors. |
#4
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TJ wrote:
I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. How could a driveway be too steep to plow or snowblow and still be usable for anything? |
#5
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TJ wrote:
I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. I don't know anything about heating driveways ( I HAVE seen pictures of snow), but the immediate thought comes to mind of the enormous number of BTUs necessary to raise the temperature of several dozen tons of concrete just one degree. Are heated driveways common? Or at least not rare? |
#6
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On Nov 12, 5:40�pm, "HeyBub" wrote:
TJ wrote: I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. I don't know anything about heating driveways ( I HAVE seen pictures of snow), but the immediate thought comes to mind of the enormous number of BTUs necessary to raise the temperature of several dozen tons of concrete just one degree. Are heated driveways common? Or at least not rare? plowing and salting are costly.here in pittsburgh they are becoming more common. one slip and fall accident i had 10 years ago cost me dearly. knee surgery, will need knee replacement too. Had arthrospic knee surgery and nearly died in recovery after undiagnosed sleep apnea got me to quit breathing.... it was a very close thing. missed lots of work. you only need to get the slab a few degrees above freezing |
#7
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George wrote:
TJ wrote: I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. How could a driveway be too steep to plow or snowblow and still be usable for anything? The OP probably meant that it is too steep for plowing or blowing to be sufficient. IOW, it is too steep to use when it isn't completely clear of snow and/or ice. |
#8
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George wrote:
TJ wrote: I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. How could a driveway be too steep to plow or snowblow and still be usable for anything? I've been to this party before. I have a driveway that has a slope that is a bit more than 16 degrees. It rivals all but Lombard Street in San Francisco. However I also get 12 feet of snow. Beware of heating the slope of a driveway until you are firmly convinced that the water which flows to the bottom will disperse thoroughly. Otherwise you will have an icy lagoon at the bottom. If the driveway slopes away from your property it is likely that the local authorities will tell you to turn the heater off. Attorneys for those injured or damaged because of the icy lake you place on the road below will send an even nastier message. An alternative is to look at high traction surfaces, a good 4 wheel drive (Mercedes 4-matic works well) and good (Yokohama) studded snow tires which together solve the problem. Good luck. Boden |
#9
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On Nov 12, 4:42*pm, TJ wrote:
I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. Hello from ski country south of Buffalo. In this part of the world, my son's school abuts the ski slopes so we have both snow and hills. My driveway is so steep that when I get to the road at the bottom, the nose of my van scrapes the driveway. We get so much snow that a few years back we had to stop the car at the end of the driveway, get out, and walk to the end of the driveway to see if a car was coming. So please explain this "too steep" thing to me. As for the heating, if it's a hot water system I suppose any boiler would do. You have to realize that it's only going to work when it's close to freezing. At -40F there's not way you're keeping it warm. Even at football stadiums -- including where the Bills play -- they can only keep them free of snow to about 28F or so IIRC. |
#10
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On Nov 12, 6:42*pm, Pat wrote:
On Nov 12, 4:42*pm, TJ wrote: As for the heating, if it's a hot water system I suppose any boiler would do. * No, not just any boiler will do. I don't know much about snow melt systems, but I do know that most boilers don't like to see any cooler than about 130 degrees F on the return water temp. With a snow melt system, I would guess that you could see 50 degree or cooler. You will need a special boiler made for that application, and of course you will need to fill the loop with glycol instead of pure water. As to the concern with water pooling up at the bottom of the driveway, I think that with most driveway snowmelt systems, the moisture contained in the snow will evaporate into the air as it is melting, so the water wont have a chance to run down the driveway and refreeze. That's what someone told me when I was asking questions about snow melt systems a few years ago. Like I said, though, I don't have any experience with them so I don't know for sure. You need to find a company that is experienced in this type of thing to help you. Good luck. |
#11
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#12
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![]() "TJ" wrote in message ... I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. To get the amount of heat you need, the right equipment is a boiler with enough output. An inefficient one is going to cost about $3000 to $4500. An efficient one will cost even more. If you have hot water heat in your house it may be possible to add an indirect fired hot water heater with circulator, sort of like having an additional zone on the system. It would be a closed loop since you'd use glycol for outdoors. The tank alone is in the $1000 range, plus some controls and labor. In any case it is going to be costly to operate if you get large amounts of snow. I'd go for a shovel and sand. |
#13
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On Wed, 12 Nov 2008 13:42:58 -0800 (PST), TJ
wrote: I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. Maybe a plumber? Possibly a friend might be able to help, at least get more ideas. Make a list of tests that will give the results you need to troubleshoot. Do you have any manufacturer names on any of the items? Hire a mechanical dynamics technician. Any movie grips in your area? |
#14
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#15
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dpb wrote:
wrote: ... think that with most driveway snowmelt systems, the moisture contained in the snow will evaporate into the air as it is melting, so the water wont have a chance to run down the driveway and refreeze. ... No way, no how if it's going to melt any amount of snow at all is all the water going to be evaporated. W/o a drainage if it's allowed to cool below freezing again, it'll be a skating rink wherever there isn't drainage when it cools below freezing again. -- Hmmm, That's why the equipment was decomissioned? |
#16
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In article ,
Tony Hwang wrote: you only need to get the slab a few degrees above freezing Which where I grew up would often have been about delta 75F. |
#17
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On Wed 12 Nov 2008 07:26:01p, dpb told us...
wrote: ... think that with most driveway snowmelt systems, the moisture contained in the snow will evaporate into the air as it is melting, so the water wont have a chance to run down the driveway and refreeze. ... No way, no how if it's going to melt any amount of snow at all is all the water going to be evaporated. W/o a drainage if it's allowed to cool below freezing again, it'll be a skating rink wherever there isn't drainage when it cools below freezing again. Years ago we moved to a house in NE Ohio that had a heated driveway. Since the driveway wasn't on a slope, I surmise it had been installed strictly for convenience. The circulated water was heated by a dedicated oil-fired boiler. There was a 6 or 8 inch wide grate at the foot of the driveway that ran the full width and emptied into the storm sewer, to dissapate the drainage water. I never measured the surface temperature, but I do know that we never had an accumulation of snow on that driveway in the 8 years we lived there. The walkway in front of the house was similarly treated, but with no drain, as the water ran into the grass on the treelawn. -- Wayne Boatwright (correct the spelling of "geemail" to reply) ************************************************** ********************** Date: Wednesday, 11(XI)/12(XII)/08(MMVIII) ************************************************** ********************** Countdown till U.S. Thanksgiving Day 2wks 3hrs 6mins ************************************************** ********************** The classical Greeks were not influenced by the classical Greeks. ************************************************** ********************** |
#18
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hee myt alsew teech thi iriginal postre haw too spel.
-- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Don Phillipson" wrote in message ... Since you need to buy the hardware, and perhaps pay someone to instal it, it is likely he will connect correctly as part of the installation process. -- Don Phillipson Carlsbad Springs (Ottawa, Canada) |
#19
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Boden wrote:
George wrote: TJ wrote: I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. How could a driveway be too steep to plow or snowblow and still be usable for anything? I've been to this party before. I have a driveway that has a slope that is a bit more than 16 degrees. It rivals all but Lombard Street in San Francisco. However I also get 12 feet of snow. Beware of heating the slope of a driveway until you are firmly convinced that the water which flows to the bottom will disperse thoroughly. Otherwise you will have an icy lagoon at the bottom. If the driveway slopes away from your property it is likely that the local authorities will tell you to turn the heater off. Attorneys for those injured or damaged because of the icy lake you place on the road below will send an even nastier message. An alternative is to look at high traction surfaces, a good 4 wheel drive (Mercedes 4-matic works well) and good (Yokohama) studded snow tires which together solve the problem. Good luck. Boden Regrade yard, build a covered drive-through carport at bottom of slope, and a covered set of steps up the hill. This house has a mere 60-foot driveway, with about an 8-foot rise, and it already cost me one transmission. Even with fresh tires, an inch of snow makes it impossible to get up without spinning the tires. Sloping driveways look impressive and inviting 8-9 months of the year. But in snow country, they are unusable when ice and snow covered, absent extraordinary measures or industrial-grade 4x4s. A lot of the driveways and parking lots I see here up north, with slopes that make them impassable in icy weather and have no place to push off or blow snow, make me convinced that most landscape architects got their training down south. -- aem sends... |
#20
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You might consider a spell check. I don't know what the HELL you are
saying. "TJ" wrote in message ... I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. |
#21
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TJ wrote:
... The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Groundwater. Nick |
#22
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![]() "Steve Barker DLT" wrote in message ... You might consider a spell check. I don't know what the HELL you are saying. "TJ" wrote in message ... I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. Steap is something you do with a tea bag on a hill Toubing is a tube made from exotic imported material Cannections is the name of his recycling bin for those metal food containers |
#23
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Ed Pawlowski wrote:
"Steve Barker DLT" wrote in message ... You might consider a spell check. I don't know what the HELL you are saying. "TJ" wrote in message ... I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. Steap is something you do with a tea bag on a hill Toubing is a tube made from exotic imported material Cannections is the name of his recycling bin for those metal food containers Cut him some slack. He was probably taught by a member of the teachers' union. |
#24
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On Nov 13, 4:59*am, "Ed Pawlowski" wrote:
"Steve Barker DLT" wrote in messagenews:5qydnYc6j77UM4bUnZ2dnUVZ_rbinZ2d@gigan ews.com... You might consider a spell check. *I don't know what the HELL you are saying. "TJ" wrote in message .... I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. Steap is something you do with a tea bag on a hill Toubing is a tube made from exotic imported material Cannections is the name of his recycling bin for those metal food containers Well at least he can **** away his money heating the great outdoors, I wish I could aford heating my indoors |
#25
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On Nov 13, 5:04*am, wrote:
TJ wrote: ... The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Groundwater. Nick Interesting idea. With a well, you'd have water at about 50 deg, right? Certainly not as much heat as water flowing from a boiler, but with sufficient volume, I wonder if it would work? I'm sure you could pump quite a bit of well water for less than the cost of the fuel to run a boiler. |
#26
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On Nov 13, 7:00*am, wrote:
On Nov 13, 5:04*am, wrote: TJ wrote: ... The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Groundwater. Nick Interesting idea. * With a well, you'd have water at about 50 deg, right? * *Certainly not as much heat as water flowing from a boiler, but with sufficient volume, I wonder if it would work? * *I'm sure you could pump quite a bit of well water for less than the cost of the fuel to run a boiler. It depends on where he is, where I am frost level is about 3ft down and - 22f at a max, 50f water might not make it before it froze.I think hiring a kid with a shovel has to be cheaper. |
#27
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Needs a huge drywell, or a tie in to the storm drain.
-- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Boden" wrote in message ... Beware of heating the slope of a driveway until you are firmly convinced that the water which flows to the bottom will disperse thoroughly. Otherwise you will have an icy lagoon at the bottom. Good luck. Boden |
#28
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![]() It depends on where he is, where I am frost level is about 3ft down and - 22f at a max, 50f water might not make it before it froze.I think hiring a kid with a shovel has to be cheaper. around here few kids will shovel, and those who do want a fortune, after my slip and fall accident i tried to hire some to shovel my 12 by 50 foot front flat driveway. with 3 inches of snow kids averaged 60 to 75 bucks, nice soft lightweight snow. a guy with a plow wanted 125 bucks.heard later kids quote 1/2 of plow cost if initially installed properly the underside of thje slab is insulated with foam, so heat is directed upwards. this is the ideal use for a dedicated tankless water heater, filled with anti freeze and circulated by a pump. ask some neighbors, if theres is heated they may be able to refer someone. |
#29
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no doubt the person being foreclosed upon soldf everything of value
they could in the home. around here they strip all the copper water lines and sometimes even the wire. homes look likew a bomb hit afterward. scrap prices have dropped a lot, |
#30
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On Nov 13, 8:35*am, Claude Hopper
wrote: ransley wrote: On Nov 12, 3:42 pm, TJ wrote: I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. If you can drive it, if you can walk it, *the Honda snow blower with tank treads will blow it alot cheaper than heating the great outdoors. That's why they make salt and sand. -- Claude Hopper * * * * * ![]() ? * * * ? * * * ¥ And 4wd with snow tires. |
#31
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Claude Hopper wrote:
Ed Pawlowski wrote: "TJ" wrote in message ... I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. To get the amount of heat you need, the right equipment is a boiler with enough output. An inefficient one is going to cost about $3000 to $4500. An efficient one will cost even more. If you have hot water heat in your house it may be possible to add an indirect fired hot water heater with circulator, sort of like having an additional zone on the system. It would be a closed loop since you'd use glycol for outdoors. The tank alone is in the $1000 range, plus some controls and labor. In any case it is going to be costly to operate if you get large amounts of snow. I'd go for a shovel and sand. The driveway only needs to be above freezing DURING a snow to melt the flakes as they fall. How often does it snow? After the driveway is dry the heat can be turned off again. But inertia is involved. You need to start pumping in heat quite a while before the snowfall to get the slab up to temp. Then keep it operating for some days to allow for drifting/snow blowing off the roof or trees/etc. |
#32
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Check with a plumbing company which does steam heating. If it is a closed
system and the water gets above boiling, steam will be created and there could be an explosion! Need a high temperature / high pressure relief valve. Then you might want some sort of anti-freeze solution in the pipes in case you choose to leave it off. But you would not want this solution flowing back into your house water supply! And pipes leak. Would need to keep it full of water/fluid. Need an indicator to see how much water is in system. Heated water/fluid expands when it heats. Need an expansion tank. You can heat with solar, swimming pool heater, multiple electric water heaters, natural gas/oil boilers, or wood burning "OWB" boiler. Then need a pump to circulate the warm/hot water. "TJ" wrote in message I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. |
#33
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On Nov 12, 9:55*pm, Phisherman wrote:
On Wed, 12 Nov 2008 13:42:58 -0800 (PST), TJ wrote: I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. Maybe a plumber? *Possibly a friend might be able to help, at least get more ideas. *Make a list of tests that will give the results you need to troubleshoot. *Do you have any manufacturer names on any of the items? * Hire a mechanical dynamics technician. * Any movie grips in your area? Possibly a friend might be able to help, at least get more ideas. Not sure why you would suggest he ask "*a* friend" when he just essentially asked hundreds (thousands?) by posting his question here. |
#34
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On Nov 13, 11:24*am, Bubba wrote:
On Thu, 13 Nov 2008 04:40:08 -0800 (PST), ransley wrote: On Nov 13, 4:59*am, "Ed Pawlowski" wrote: "Steve Barker DLT" wrote in messagenews:5qydnYc6j77UM4bUnZ2dnUVZ_rbinZ2d@gigan ews.com... You might consider a spell check. *I don't know what the HELL you are saying. "TJ" wrote in message ... I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. Steap is something you do with a tea bag on a hill Toubing is a tube made from exotic imported material Cannections is the name of his recycling bin for those metal food containers Well at least he can **** away his money heating the great outdoors, I wish I could aford heating my indoors Why heat the great outdoors in a trailer park, ransley? You do like to dream though, dont you? Bubba- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - You drinkin again bubbass, what no customers during the day of heating season turn ons, Or are you on drugs again, well at least you confrim yr an asshole, I wonder how many potential clients stay away from heating guys with the name Bubba. |
#35
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![]() "Bill" wrote in message ... Check with a plumbing company which does steam heating. If it is a closed system and the water gets above boiling, steam will be created and there could be an explosion! Need a high temperature / high pressure relief valve. Why would it get above boiling? Home heating systems reach 180 and a high limit switch turns off the burner. Same thing with an indirect fired water heater and glycol. You set the desired temperature on an aquastat. Expansion, yes; explosion, no. |
#36
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On Nov 13, 9:33*am, Claude Hopper
wrote: Ed Pawlowski wrote: "TJ" wrote in message .... I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. To get the amount of heat you need, the right equipment is a boiler with enough output. *An inefficient one is going to cost about $3000 to $4500. An efficient one will cost even more. *If you have hot water heat in your house it may be possible to add an indirect fired hot water heater with circulator, sort of like having an additional zone on the system. *It would be a closed loop since you'd use glycol for outdoors. *The tank alone is in the $1000 range, plus some controls and labor. In any case it is going to be costly to operate if you get large amounts of snow. *I'd go for a shovel and sand. The driveway only needs to be above freezing DURING a snow to melt the flakes as they fall. How often does it snow? After the driveway is dry the heat can be turned off again. -- Claude Hopper * * * * * ![]() ? * * * ? * * * ¥ I don't know about the OP, but where I live snow is a daily occurrence. Plus there the wind to deal with. Plus you know that old saying "it's too cold for it to snow", well that isn't true. |
#37
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On Nov 13, 8:18*am, ransley wrote:
On Nov 13, 7:00*am, wrote: On Nov 13, 5:04*am, wrote: TJ wrote: ... The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Groundwater. Nick Interesting idea. * With a well, you'd have water at about 50 deg, right? * *Certainly not as much heat as water flowing from a boiler, but with sufficient volume, I wonder if it would work? * *I'm sure you could pump quite a bit of well water for less than the cost of the fuel to run a boiler. It depends on where he is, where I am frost level is about 3ft down and - 22f at a max, 50f water might not make it before it froze.I think hiring a kid with a shovel has to be cheaper. Three things to consider. First off, glycol probably isn't the best thing for in the lines. Get something that is okay for food service. It's more expensive but safer if there's a spill/break. Second, whatever your frost line is, it's deeper under a driveway. If you get a cold spell and pipes break, it's no coincident that they ALWAYS break under your driveway or sidewalk. Pavement has no insulating value acts as a HUGE cold-sink to drive the cold farther down. Sometimes it's as much as a foot deeper under pavement. Grass with snow on it is a pretty good insulator and that's why you don't get freezing underground pipes if there's snow on the ground. Thirdly (and speaking of snow as an insulator), Someone mentioned melting accumulations. If the snow builds up, turning on the heat will melt the snow pretty efficiently because the snow cap will keep any excess heat from being lost. 100% of the heat will be used to heat the snow. If the OP doesn't get much snow or much only into the 20s, salting or brining might work just as well. You could put down a nice layer of salt and wet it. That would work for temps in the high 20s -- other chems will work at lower temps. The biggest question is "where does the OP live and how much snow do they get". Where I live, you just learn to accept that there will be snow and you'll never get your driveway clear in January or February. You can't fight LES so you just have to accept it. |
#38
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Why would it get above boiling?
Water can get above boiling if you have a do-it-yourself job and a product like the following which is a coil which goes into a woodstove... http://www.hilkoil.com/product.htm |
#39
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On Nov 12, 3:42*pm, TJ wrote:
I am looking for information on installing a water heater to provide heat to my driveway. The former owner removed all the michanical equipment just before the bank forclosed. I don't have a choice about heating or not heating as the driveway is too steap to plow, snowblow, etc. The toubing installed in the driveway is in good shape and the cannections are in the garage, I just dont know what to hook to them, Any help will be apreciated. These systems run anti-freeze, not water. Get it done properly or the tubing will burst, I heat my garage floor with water and never had a freeze up, but a driveway would have to be on glycol. A neighbor down the street has a heated driveway, he still has to shovel so I'm not so sure they are worth it in the upper midwest. But maybe in the lower midwest they would be just the ticket. |
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