>I agree. Now I'm allergic to thermodynamics (seriously)<
I got an A+ in heat tranfer

, but that was 22 years ago (man, seems impossible), and it doesn't seem to have helped me too much!
>I'm not saying they aren't the coolest things I've seen on AquaticEcosystems in a year. I'm just wondering if they still aren't large enough (in terms of surface area) to transfer heat between internal water and external soil, despite their cool ruffles.>
I agree in general, however, I'm not sure what would be better. I'm not sure that the problem is in resistance of heat transfer to the surrounding soil, or the rate at which that heat is further dispersed to the ground even farther away from the loop.
>They look to me, at least, like they'd be better in the water (which of course they can't be for saltwater), and that even after all this rain, if they are in the soil above the groundwater table, they wouldn't be able to disipate heat in the soil.<
I believe that Aquatic Ecosystems mentions they are designed for use in water. Actually, if you've even been to my house you will see that there is a small pond in my back yard. The pond is only about 12 inches deep, but it is close enough that when I was digging my hole, towards the very end I did 'strike' water.
>I felt that for a heat exchange loop, you'd need a really long length of metal pipe, preferably below the water table.<
That's correct, but you still need a large surface area, both to transfer heat out of the water in the loop, and a large area of soil surface to absorb and disipate the heat. When the pipe becomes long enough though I would think it would become quite expensive in terms of materials (I might be wrong on this, I don't know what pipe costs). These aluminum exchangers are so inexpensive that I could have used quite a few more without increasing the expense very much. The problem is the effort involved in burying them all.
>When I thought of how I'd do my heat exchange system when I can own property, I'd want to sink a larger diameter pipe straight down into the ground. This, of course, would be costly and expensive, as it would be akin to drilling a well. Then, I'd insert a smaller diameter PVC pipe down the middle of the larger diameter metal pipe. Water would flow down one and up the other, with the PVC acting as sort of an insulator. To pass water through the system, very little head would need to be applied, as there is no change in static head and if the velocity is small, no measureable head loss. <
Matt, interesting idea. I still think you might run into problems with not enough surface area of your metal pipe. For me, drilling deep would not be an option as there is a LOT of rock below my house (sounds expensive, too). There was a lot of blasting done to build most of the houses built up near me. For all of this work you have to take into consideration the cost of your project vs. the cost of a chiller, and the electricity long term to run it. There are lots of efficient heat exhchangers out there, but the ones built with things like titanium run into big $ very quickly. I tried to do this project on a shoe string budget as much as possible.
>I did misread where the metal coils were, thinking they were in water. Relying on plastic to exchange heat in the system water is also going to cost efficiency too.<
Not really very much, as I described in the earlier calculation. Even if they were perfect, there would be a maximum increase in heat transfer of less than 30%.
>Let us know how this goes, for I am very interested,<
What I really need is to get 10 guys to come over on a Saturday and dig a giant hole for me!
Question for you Matt....if instead of running into 4 of these aluminum exchangers in parallel (with all the connectors, etc.) I ran into 8 in parallel, how would the pressure drop through the loop as a whole change (grade in this class was not as good!

).