Category: Energy Modules

Buried Hot Water Tanks to Collect any spare energy from the Sun via eletric or water thermal.

  • Number 1 Energy Modules Installation Started

    It was our first hole to do (out of the total of 5!) and it is the 2nd
    smallest one to dig out! It lives under bedroom 3, half in and half out of
    its en-suite wet room.

    We dug out 3metres by 2.5metres and 1.2metres down (10feet by 8feet by 4
    feet down), to make room for the insulation (200mm thick under and around
    the edges with 100mm on top), wrapping around the energy module, measuring
    2.5metres by 2metres and almost 1metre tall, being made of 2 layers of 10
    crates, to make a 20 Aquacell “hot water” tank.

    We dug out most of the hole using the digger.

    Module-1-Rough-dug-hole

    Module-1-Rough-dug-hole

    Then Shaun cleaned the bottom with a spade until it nearly level. We got the petrol powered plate vibrator (which is very heavy) into the hole using the mini-digger to lower it down (and back up again!) and ran it around make sure the bottom was compacted
    nice and solid.

    We needed to make sure the bottom is as level as we can make it so we put
    down two edge strips and got them positioned using the site laser height
    gadget and set the two edges exactly at 2.7 metres on the sighting pole. Just
    to clarify, the level generator is sitting on a reference point 1 metre above
    ground, and the foundations (and the whole house) is 500 mm down below ground
    level, thus making the ground we are working on 1.5 metres below the
    reference point so 2.7 metres minus 1.5 metres makes 1.2 metres which is the
    depth of our hole!! Nothing to it!! Smile!

    Module-1-Guide-rails

    Module-1-Guide-rails

    We scraped along the two edges with a flat straight CLS 89 mm timber and got
    the bottom of the hole fairly flat and level so when the water tank (oops I
    mean the Energy Module) is set down, the water will not spill out on one
    edge or another as it rises and falls. We Hope!! Grin!

    Module-1-Hole-ready

    Module-1-Hole-ready

    Tomorrow’s job is to cut and get ready the insulation boards and make up the
    required thickness on the bottom and vertical edges, while we wait for the
    delivery of the 20 mm plastic pipe that we are suing as a conduit for the temperature
    sensors we want under the tank.

  • First Twenty Crates Washed!

    This morning, we got the first 20 Aquacell crates opened up, blasted with
    jets of water and reassembled back together again!

    We made a small dent in the pile of our Aquacell mountain ..

    Stack-of-Aquacells

    Stack-of-Aquacells

    Only another 180 crates to go!!

    We used our crate splitter tool, then used the pressure washer to spray
    water into all the crevices and then loaded our trolley with the sparkling
    clean plastic crates afterwards.

    Washing-Area

    Washing-Area

    A very wet job it is too!