Like you, I cut my solar teeth doing SHW back in the mid 1980s.

I built my system over 25 years ago. It has two, flat plate 4 X 10 collectors 
(I got used for free) circulating glycol. This loop feeds a flat plate heat 
exchanger for the potable side. 

Both sides are pumped. The glycol loop is PV direct (via LCB). The potable side 
is switched via a differential controller. The pumps last around 20+ years. It 
is a super simple, low tech way to heat water (black pipes in the sun). The 
only issue I have is it sometimes makes too much hot water.

Compare this to top of the technology pyramid, high tech PV semiconductors and 
inverters (usually reliant on grid power), or refrigerant /compressor heat 
pumps... to heat water? 

Obsolete? 

Not in my mind... but what do I know. I am one of those people who embraces the 
"Limits to Growth" research, which details that (doh) infinite growth is not 
possible on a finite planet, so small and simple are job 1.

But I am a supposed luddite, running no maintenance, 30 year life, flooded lead 
calcium batteries on my GTBB system... where a very modest, 15 kWh/day PV 
system makes our efficient homestead zero energy, including winter electric 
heating (in Mount Shasta snow country) and EV charging.

Stepping off my old, worn out soap box - lol!

Todd





On Wednesday, June 18, 2025 12:52pm, "Solar Energy Solutions via RE-wrenches" 
<re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org> said:



We have been installing solar hot water heating system since 1987. Previous to 
87, during the Carter years, there were 100 solar companies in the Portland 
Oregon area. So far as we can tell, we are the last man standing doing solar 
thermal in Portland. Subsequently, we don’t know how to advise people on what 
to do with their solar thermal systems. The plumbing industry never embraced 
solar  thermal, solar electric has sucked up all the solar thermal people, and 
heat pump hot water heaters have come along, which bring people to the same 
resource footprint as thermal brings people down to.  I have slowly come to the 
painful conclusion that solar thermal is obsolete.
Thoughts?



Andrew Koyaanisqatsi
President
Solar Energy Solutions, Inc.
The BRIGHT CHOICE

 
Since 1987, helping you and your 
Portland neighbors move towards an environmentally sustainable future.
 
[ 503-238-4502 ]( tel:503-238-4502 )
[ www.SolarEnergyOregon.com ]( http://www.solarenergyoregon.com/ )

On Jun 18, 2025, at 4:12 AM, Dana Orzel via RE-wrenches 
<re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org> wrote:


 I have not read all of the comments on this thread so please excuse any 
repeats.


The valley that I live in has so many drain back systems it’s amazing. I have 
inherited the service on them not that I wanted to.  The trick seems to be that 
you need a pump that gets the Evac tube manifold full of water & pushes the air 
out very quickly in order to eliminate the possibility of steam lockup. The 
taco 2699 series of pumps were used here for a lot of the systems .  
There are many up sides to employing evac tubes in general & many down sides.
Upsides include:
Higher temperatures at colder air temps (if not covered with snow).
Lighter weight at installation .
Smaller footprint on roof or area of installation .
Production of hot water in less than desirable weather conditions.
Production of higher water temps.


The down sides of evac tube systems with drain back are:
When the tank gets hot & the circ pump to the collector gets turned off as long 
as it’s sunny the manifold is too hot to restart & resume to make additional 
hot water as it steam locks.  This Of course limits the overall efficiency of 
the system & comprises this the systems production, not good as you get 1 tank 
of hot water/ day unless very cloudy conditions for a bit & the manifold 
cools.This requires a controller that will not restart the pump or you burn out 
pumps. 
Avoiding shut down requires having a very large tank(s).The systems here have 
oversized atmospheric tanks 300-800+ gallons each with dual heat exchangers one 
for solar & one for DHW  before the backup source.
Pollution during the production of the tubes 
All are Made in china due too pollution during tube production pollutionp 
Steam lockup
Tubes Still covered in snow long after the sun has returned after the snow 
storm has cleared out 
Evac tubes have their uses though I tend to not install them In residential 
systems. I think that high water/ higher temperature requirements usage 
applications all day like schools, jails, commercial production facilities, 
dairies, etc .
That all said. I tend to install flat plate  collectors appropriately sized for 
system needs, with some kind of way to address overheat when people go on 
vacation midsummer so I don’t have to go rescue the system when I am on a 
vacation!




Dana Orzel - d...@solarwork.com - 208.721.7003

On Jun 17, 2025, at 6:23 PM, Luke Christy via RE-wrenches 
<re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org> wrote:


 Hi Jay,
I agree with Brad that Evacuated tubes are not a good (or even a reasonably 
possible) candidate for a drainback retrofit. If they are pass-through tubes, 
then they cannot fully drain as piping connections typically come through 
header connections at the tops of the tubes. If they are sealed heat-pipe 
tubes, then not only is the header unlikely to drain properly, but the tubes 
themselves will stagnate at a very high temperature without heat transfer fluid 
flow. 
I recommend a diversion heat- dump arrangement such as Todd suggests.Use 
paralleled runs of conventional hot water baseboard fin tube for the heat 
dissipator. This stuff is readily available at almost every plumbing supply 
house and it works well.  
Diversion can be activated by either an electric 3-way valve and a set point 
controller, or the passive wax-thermostat 3-way valve that you mention. I have 
used both methods extensively with good results. The wax thermostat will 
probably be significantly harder to find. Some years ago I ordered them through 
Low Energy Systems in Denver. Reach out to me off list and and I can supply 
some contact information. 
-Luke
 



Luke Christy
 Renewable energy consultant

 NABCEP Certified PV Installation Professional™: 

 Solar Gain Services, LLC
 PO Box 531
 Monte Vista, CO 81144
719.588.3044
 sgsrenewab...@gmail.com


On Jun 17, 2025, at 3:46 PM, jay via RE-wrenches 
<re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org> wrote:

In doing research today I found the following, not sure where I can buy them at 
this point.
1. solar dissipation tubes.  that will do about 12,000 btu or at least this one 
does. 
2. 3 way thermostatic valve which uses a type of wax that opens and closes it 
at a specific temp and routes the heat through the dissipation tube vs the heat 
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