Greg2
Well-Known Member
Ah, so 80 degrees is unlikely to be sufficient. Thing is that this is the operating temp of our engines so it seems as though it will never work properly then
Ah, so 80 degrees is unlikely to be sufficient. Thing is that this is the operating temp of our engines so it seems as though it will never work properly then
I am thinking of fitting one of these to keep the cabin warm and demist to save wearing out the Webasto.
http://www.t7design.co.uk/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=65&products_id=301
My calorifier gets really hot, so I should think it will work OK
I would not worry too much about mounting the matrix above the engine. In some farm machinary the heater is mounted in the top of the cab feet above the engine, and the pipes are never lagged.
Simply not so, it is a matter of doing the calcs and specifying the correct heater(s) or A/C to suit and installing it correctly, equally importantly having the full knowlege of what it is expected to do.Providing heating on a boat is akin to sticking your finger in the air and trying to gauge the wind speed.
Tom.
Look at the spec. it goes back to what I wrote earlier, if you can get the coolant close to 100c it will give decent heat, but if you can't then it will not.I am thinking of fitting one of these to keep the cabin warm and demist to save wearing out the Webasto.
http://www.t7design.co.uk/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=65&products_id=301
My calorifier gets really hot, so I should think it will work OK
I would not worry too much about mounting the matrix above the engine. In some farm machinary the heater is mounted in the top of the cab feet above the engine, and the pipes are never lagged.
Simply not so, it is a matter of doing the calcs and specifying the correct heater(s) or A/C to suit and installing it correctly, equally importantly having the full knowlege of what it is expected to do.
I would imagine that companies like webasto would have done the research and have that information....
you could start here for GRP, there are values available for most material used in building boats, the OT is avariable.http://www.rtech-materials.co.uk/news/2013/08/09/thermal-properties-of-grp-panel/Show me where you get the "U" values for GRP walls, windows, doors, roof, floor and ventilation for specific boats which would enable you to design a correctly sized heating system and at what outside temperature.
Correctly sized and designed heating requires all of them and more. A best guess with boats is all that can be done.
I stand by my original quote.....
Providing heating on a boat is akin to sticking your finger in the air and trying to gauge the wind speed.
Tom
you could start here for GRP, there are values available for most material used in building boats, the OT is avariable.http://www.rtech-materials.co.uk/news/2013/08/09/thermal-properties-of-grp-panel/
And just how do you think that information is going to help design a correctly sized heating system on a boat.
Personally, I don't need to start anywhere..... My experience comes from designing correctly sized heating systems for almost 40 years and I know that I couldn't do it on Little Ship so I held an experienced finger in the air and picked something that would "hopefully" do the job in the temperatures I would be using her in.
Tom.[/QUOTE.]
OK, I acept that your single 40 years trumps the Webasto multiple engineers and design department + MOD design engineers decades of histotical data and experience and will no longer trust the peramiters they give me or the software they use to design systems and will say no more,you can't do it' ergo they can not do it, they are wrong and you of course are right.
And just how do you think that information is going to help design a correctly sized heating system on a boat.
Personally, I don't need to start anywhere..... My experience comes from designing correctly sized heating systems for almost 40 years and I know that I couldn't do it on Little Ship so I held an experienced finger in the air and picked something that would "hopefully" do the job in the temperatures I would be using her in.
Tom.[/QUOTE.]
OK, I acept that your single 40 years trumps the Webasto multiple engineers and design department + MOD design engineers decades of histotical data and experience and will no longer trust the peramiters they give me or the software they use to design systems and will say no more,you can't do it' ergo they can not do it, they are wrong and you of course are right.
FFS... Historical over sizing of heating isn't designing.... I would assume that if you fitted a heating system in your home that needed 15Kw at an outside temp of -2 you would accept a boiler capable of providing 30Kw. That's not design that's finger in the air.
Ask Webasto to guarantee a temperature on a boat.... I will guarantee they won't show you any heat lost charts they used. They will only design on volume of air at best, now even if you don't agree....... That isn't design.
Tom.
I think the thing is that I expected the unit to put our warmer air than it does but it would appear that our normal engine operating temp of 80 degrees just ain't enough!