this post was submitted on 21 Jun 2023
17 points (100.0% liked)
DIY
2825 readers
4 users here now
Share your self-made stuff and half-baked projects here.
Also check out !diy@beehaw.org
There is also a related XMPP chat.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I used to have a solar water heater for my swimming pool, and it had a wax-actuated valve (!) When the water in the panels was hot enough to melt the wax, a paddle could start turning, and water could flow in the panels. If the water cooled, the wax would congeal and the paddle would "freeze" - blocking water flow - the pool circulating pump had a pressure regulating valve and relief valve, so when the panels on the roof were not accepting water, the pump would bypass them and deliver water straight to the pool without heating. I thought it was quite clever (the wax and paddle assembly were inside a sealed device - I never actually saw how it functioned, only recall the vendor explanation). I have not seen a comparable invention in several internet searches over the years.
Do you by any chance mean this type of valve? https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wax_thermostatic_element I must agree, it is quite ingeniously thought of
I am not sure if that is the same; the assembly on the solar panel was larger diameter than the rest of the piping system perhaps around the size of a two-inch PVC ball valve, where the rest of system was (if I recall right) about 1-inch or maybe 1.5? But I guess there could have been a component like this inside. I am familiar with these for automotive thermostats in cooling systems, but I never pictured that they might have meant this. Otoh, why not? It would do the job and maybe work for OP's project; especially if they are made for a range of different temperature conditions.