Today's haul with a two foot long Lowe's receipt:
Not pictured are the 100' of 3/4" pvc pipes (plenty of extra) and 48' of the 3/8th wall insulation.
Pretty much everything except lengths of 3/4", 5/8", and 1/2" tubing has been purchased now. I'm still looking for a pressure gauge with a maximum reading lower than 100 psi. I also need some of the materials for the pump's sound dampened, and actively cooled housing. A small float switch that doesn't cost as much as the pump would be nice too.
Tomorrow I'll glue together the inside the house fittings and mount a scrap osb board to the utility closet's wall. The reservoir and filter are ready to be mounted. I might need to put the pump on a shelf above the floor to avoid a 90 degree connection to the temperature probe -> ball valve -> exit line through the floor. Leaving enough spacing so the tubing can flex upward should be the simplest way to handle that.
This is why I don't want to work outside tomorrow, even under the house. Friday isn't looking that nice either.
The $45 brazed heat exchanger with 1/2" barbs also arrived today. I can use it if I ever want to separate my pc loop from the geo one. Or it could be used to create a second cooled loop for other devices with only a slight reduction in the geo loops flow.
I almost bought one of those $10 pumps at harbor freight last night. It could pump water through a radiator stuck outside the window to cool one side of this heat exchanger. I also had to resist buying garden house adapters to do that with an open loop with the cold well water. If you can circulate colder water through one side like that, you can easily lower your loops temperature without impacting the too flow much or contaminating your pc's loop. I'd really like to get a Dwyer digital manometer to test the pressure drop, but looking at the flow reduction on the King meter will do for now. All the 1-wire pieces have already made a mockery of my budget.
There's nothing new to report on the shipping status of the R4 insulation foam and the 1-wire components. I only really need the moisture and temperature sensor before digging the geothermal trench. Most of the pipe insulation could be installed on the shallow trench's pipe with the buried coils in the ground. The next week and weekend are supposed to be dry and warmer so I hope they arrive.
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