My books, movies, videos, podcasts, events ... the big collection of paul wheaton stuff!
The ultimate goal of farming is not the growing of crops, but the cultivation and perfection of human beings. - Masanobu Fukuoka
Previously known as "Antibubba".
By heating the water, aren't you also cooling the compost pile? Is there a noticeable change to the decomposition process?
My books, movies, videos, podcasts, events ... the big collection of paul wheaton stuff!
My books, movies, videos, podcasts, events ... the big collection of paul wheaton stuff!
Don McLean wrote:Hi Carola, no, no experience of heating a hot tub this way.
I guess if you set a bath in (or built a large compost heap around) a tub of some sort, & heavily insulated the top of the tub (to prevent heat loss), water in the tub would heat up over time, ultimately to whatever the temperature of the compost heap was.
A typical bath is aroudn 100 litres or so of water, a significant volume to heat, i.e. it would heat relatively slowly. The original show compst heap appears to have heated much more than this over its 2 month life though, so it should be possible. I guess you may need something in the water to prevent hot-water loving things growing in the lush-temperature water as it heated up. Epsom Salts maybe???
I've friends who removed the spiral copper heat exchanger from inside a typical (UK) copper hot water cylinder, and cobbled this (somehow; I can ask them if you are interested) to a tub of some description to make a hot tub. They just filled the empty centre of the copper coil with wood, lit it and the hot water naturally gravity circulated (thermosyphoned) to the top of the tub; with a lower, return water connection in the tub (possibly via the plg hole) for the (cooler) water to circulate back to the coil to be re-heated by the fire. Appropriate relative levels are ctircal for an efficient thermosyphoning system.
The simpler solution is a (heavy guage) tin bath directly over a fire. There was an article about this type somewhere on the Permaculture UK site recently (2011, via a Facebook notification), though all I could see just now was: http://www.permaculture.co.uk/issue/summer-2006.
Cheers, Don
Soaking up information.
Tyler Reed wrote:How did Paul Wheaton pump water through his pile? Also, what was his water flowrate?
My books, movies, videos, podcasts, events ... the big collection of paul wheaton stuff!
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