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Buy an immersion timer, and set it up to give restricted operating times, such as twenty minutes in the morning, and twenty minutes in the evening or something like that, in order to save on energy bills.
Nothing to do with saving money on the electricity bill. See previous message.Buy an immersion timer, and set it up to give restricted operating times, such as twenty minutes in the morning, and twenty minutes in the evening or something like that, in order to save on energy bills.
OK, I can see two or three ways it could be done, but whether any of them are practical or actually have equipment available is a different matter.I want to dump the excess power from my PV array into the water but I'm not likely to have 3kw spare.
I want to dump the excess power from my PV array into the water but I'm not likely to have 3kw spare. I appreciate the second law of thermodynamics but as the power is free I don't care if it takes three times as long !
17thman said:the reason that it is pointless is the second law of thermodynamics. You cannot create or destroy energy
Hmm, switch between two voltages, you mean like a tap changer with two tapsBut to get back to the original problem, I think the simplest solution is SimonH2's step-down transformer but without the complexity of automated tap changing. A standard 2:1 ratio transformer, of the type used with 110V power tools, would reduce the effective power of your heater to 750 watts. Then, if you want a little extra sophistication, you could devise a way of switching the heater from secondary to primary if and when 3kW is available.
Which is why it needs to be automatic.the trouble you will have when trying to micromanage the system is you set it up on a sunny day then it clouds over for the next seven hours unless you normally use electric rather than gas to heat your water it could back fire and be expensive
Yes indeed, but that's the sort of thing the tax (ie FIT) regime promotes. He gets paid for every unit he produces whether he exports it or not. Given the price differential between imported and exported power, there's a financial incentive to use what you make when you make it - rather than export it when it's made and re-import it when it's needed.Thats quite an inefficent way to acheieve a solar thermal system
SimonH2 said:you mean like a tap changer with two taps
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