fresh air in a normal recovery well

Heating, insulation, ventilation, VMC, cooling ... short thermal comfort. Insulation, wood energy, heat pumps but also electricity, gas or oil, VMC ... Help in choosing and implementation, problem solving, optimization, tips and tricks ...
boubka
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by boubka » 15/12/09, 13:07

In short, it is not won in advance.

it is also my opinion : Cry:
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subvalence
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by subvalence » 15/12/09, 13:59

If I go on the solution, and that puts during the extraction a filter style air conditioning filter or cabin cabin filter, can it purify the air and remove humidity?
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Alain G
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by Alain G » 15/12/09, 14:01

subvalence wrote:Here are the solutions I am considering, in your opinion what are the disadvantages and advantages of each and what should I pay attention to?


Image

Thank you in advance



So there you will not really recover much with this system. not worth trying, unless you really believe very strongly and that for your conscience you must know! :|
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by subvalence » 15/12/09, 14:09

For you Alain, recovering the fresh air from the well is impossible?
I thought that given the volume of air and the passage of water, I would always have fresh air knowing that c for use only in hot weather.

If you are really sure then I give up?
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Alain G
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by Alain G » 15/12/09, 14:30

subvalence wrote:For you Alain, recovering the fresh air from the well is impossible?
I thought that given the volume of air and the passage of water, I would always have fresh air knowing that c for use only in hot weather.

If you are really sure then I give up?


Subvalence

When you make a water / water transfer, you can recover (or rather lose) a lot of calories in the exchange, but with the air you will quickly have exhausted your source.

If there is water in the well, you can pump this water to pass it through a roll of copper pipe with a fan, it requires very little water if you do not try to cool the whole house.

Here is an idea of ​​the fan with the copper tube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJy9DHZxf78
:D
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Rabbit
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by Rabbit » 15/12/09, 18:26

Before wanting to use the air contained in the well, you must check
if you are not located in a region in Radon.
surely not as bad as tobacco but it's still
not great.
The best solution seems to me to be a water / water and then water / air exchanger.
This will allow you to dry your house at the same time
during stormy summer.
In winter a mechanical double flow ventilation with heat recovery
seems to me more effective and less risky.
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gegyx
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by gegyx » 15/12/09, 19:09

Alain G wrote: Here is an idea of ​​the fan with the copper tube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GJy9DHZxf78
:D
Really original.

To help out, in case of hot weather.
Go, to respect the forum, we will say to relieve an elder, or a suffering baby. : Cheesy:
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subvalence
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by subvalence » 15/12/09, 19:43

Rabbit, I understand what you mean in theory, but how do you put it into practice?

Thanks in advance to the econologists
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boubka
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by boubka » 15/12/09, 19:56

The best solution seems to me to be a water / water and then water / air exchanger.

why two heat exchangers :?:
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by Rabbit » 15/12/09, 20:27

Why two heat exchangers

To prevent the well water from corroding the water / air exchanger, thus
that the piping leading to it is an installation intended for
long term, so consider the possibility that well water
either corrosive (ferruginous water for example, or quite acidic
as is the case with water from my well).
PS. I forgot to say that it avoids a too powerful pump.
water from a well requires more energy than circulating it in a closed circuit. This will also prevent the pump from being grilled when the level
of the well will drop under the suction.

I understand what you mean in theory but how to put it into practice?


Maybe by putting a water / air exchanger in parallel with a VCM.
In winter VCM, in summer heat exchanger. You therefore use the same conduits
air for the 2 functions.
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