Good video. I wouldn't use the batt insulation. It will absorb moisture. Once it gets wet it loses most of it's insulation value. The closed-cell foam pieces were a good idea.
Is it true these outdoor furnace use a lot of wood? why not get a brick lined one and use coal with the wood,It would burn hotter and longer before you have to make a new fire in it.
Is it true these outdoor furnace use a lot of wood? why not get a brick lined one and use coal with the wood,It would burn hotter and longer before you have to make a new fire in it.
WE install with 1-1/2 foil backed boiler insulation. cut peaces 20" long off the 4' wide roll, so we end up with peaces 4'x20" wrap one wrap around the hot line, then wrap both lines as one until the 20" is used, foil tape the over laps and every 2' then pull into 6" ducted. we do winter installs leaving line on top of ground, no snow melt at all, been doing it that way for over 15 years
Nice Vid. I waz going to note, make sure your zip ties & insulation wrap are not squished tight! ( It makes hot spots) I saved some money by using 3/4"... seems fine for my usage. Just over 50’ run. I also invested in the Pex crimping tool. Big saving if you’re doing lots of process runs! My Set-Up is 2 room car radiator box heaters, 2 home made side arms for hot tub & hot water recirculation.
@6969smurfy I had more room with ¾” pex so I used 4 to 5 layers news papers over the foam rubber sleeves. Then 2” insulation, cut down rolls to 8” widths. Spiral wrapped aluminum foil, then wrapped in plastic. I did this manufacturing in around 10 ft sections at a time. Making sure everything is as light a fluffy in corrugated tube as possible.
@6969smurfy Thanks for the comment. The zip ties are just tight enough to hold it in place, with some indention - but I think their overall surface area is minimal. The pink insulation is as tight as it needed to be to fit in the pipe. I've been thinking it should have been smaller (thinner) insulation so it wasn't very tight at all, but I'm not loosing too much sleep over it. I'm hoping for a low temp drop and I think the fact that I used 8" corrugated (most use 4) and also the wood chips help
@6969smurfy Where was this video last year. I had a heck of a time putting my pex throught a pipe and you make it look soooo easy. Thanks and great job.
Good video. I wouldn't use the batt insulation. It will absorb moisture. Once it gets wet it loses most of it's insulation value. The closed-cell foam pieces were a good idea.
ProfKSE 2 weeks ago
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Is it true these outdoor furnace use a lot of wood? why not get a brick lined one and use coal with the wood,It would burn hotter and longer before you have to make a new fire in it.
sidebarr7 4 months ago
Is it true these outdoor furnace use a lot of wood? why not get a brick lined one and use coal with the wood,It would burn hotter and longer before you have to make a new fire in it.
sidebarr7 4 months ago
Hey thanks for the video. I was struggling on how to fix my old boiler pipes. As you can see by my video, you were the inspiration for what we did.
MrDan27611 5 months ago
WE install with 1-1/2 foil backed boiler insulation. cut peaces 20" long off the 4' wide roll, so we end up with peaces 4'x20" wrap one wrap around the hot line, then wrap both lines as one until the 20" is used, foil tape the over laps and every 2' then pull into 6" ducted. we do winter installs leaving line on top of ground, no snow melt at all, been doing it that way for over 15 years
arnoldcustom 5 months ago
Nice Vid. I waz going to note, make sure your zip ties & insulation wrap are not squished tight! ( It makes hot spots) I saved some money by using 3/4"... seems fine for my usage. Just over 50’ run. I also invested in the Pex crimping tool. Big saving if you’re doing lots of process runs! My Set-Up is 2 room car radiator box heaters, 2 home made side arms for hot tub & hot water recirculation.
6969smurfy 1 year ago
@6969smurfy I had more room with ¾” pex so I used 4 to 5 layers news papers over the foam rubber sleeves. Then 2” insulation, cut down rolls to 8” widths. Spiral wrapped aluminum foil, then wrapped in plastic. I did this manufacturing in around 10 ft sections at a time. Making sure everything is as light a fluffy in corrugated tube as possible.
6969smurfy 1 year ago
@6969smurfy Thanks for the comment. The zip ties are just tight enough to hold it in place, with some indention - but I think their overall surface area is minimal. The pink insulation is as tight as it needed to be to fit in the pipe. I've been thinking it should have been smaller (thinner) insulation so it wasn't very tight at all, but I'm not loosing too much sleep over it. I'm hoping for a low temp drop and I think the fact that I used 8" corrugated (most use 4) and also the wood chips help
sethea 1 year ago
@6969smurfy Where was this video last year. I had a heck of a time putting my pex throught a pipe and you make it look soooo easy. Thanks and great job.
DaBumb 5 months ago
Great project!
OmegaMolecule 1 year ago
Thanks for posting these videos. I'm following your project - I wish you the best of luck. May your nights be warm and your welds leak free!
Make sure to use some anti corrosives in the water.
xexorz 1 year ago