I have to redo the base of my hearth this year. I've also been thinking about possibly preheating DWH with the wood stove. Although I've been entertaining the idea of doing a solar DWH system, which would reduce the need/benefit of preheating the DHW with the wood stove, let's assume the solar system wasn't in the picture and that I didn't want to run a HX in or directly attached to the wood stove (too risky IMO).
Since I'm working with a clean slate here, I was entertaining the idea of integrating a HX of some type into the hearth since I have to rebuild anyway (on a concrete slab). Would it be worth the expense of sinking say a 150' loop of 1" PEX into the hearth for preheating DHW? What I was thinking about doing is laying down 2" of rigid insulation over the concrete slab, then pour say 12" of concrete (with the HX submerged in), and finishing the top surface with slate or some other similar substrate. It looks like 12" of concrete would have an R value of 2 or less, so I would think the majority of the heat would be transferred to the HX over time.
I realize I wouldn't be able to fully heat my DHW by doing this, but I would think it would significantly reduce my DWH costs. If my math is correct, a 1" x 150' tube should hold about 6 gallons of water. If this mass (the base of the hearth) was warmed to say even 100° F, having 6 gallons of 100° water on tap to feed into the traditional DHW system should drastically reduce DHW expenses. And after the initial 6 gallons of water in the PEX is used, there would still be some additional heat transfer into the HX from the warm hearth, granted it would not be 100%, but even 50% would be significant as the delta T is greatly reduced... especially since my incoming water is in the mid 40's during the cold months.
With that said, how warm does your hearth get? Thoughts on doing something like this?
Since I'm working with a clean slate here, I was entertaining the idea of integrating a HX of some type into the hearth since I have to rebuild anyway (on a concrete slab). Would it be worth the expense of sinking say a 150' loop of 1" PEX into the hearth for preheating DHW? What I was thinking about doing is laying down 2" of rigid insulation over the concrete slab, then pour say 12" of concrete (with the HX submerged in), and finishing the top surface with slate or some other similar substrate. It looks like 12" of concrete would have an R value of 2 or less, so I would think the majority of the heat would be transferred to the HX over time.
I realize I wouldn't be able to fully heat my DHW by doing this, but I would think it would significantly reduce my DWH costs. If my math is correct, a 1" x 150' tube should hold about 6 gallons of water. If this mass (the base of the hearth) was warmed to say even 100° F, having 6 gallons of 100° water on tap to feed into the traditional DHW system should drastically reduce DHW expenses. And after the initial 6 gallons of water in the PEX is used, there would still be some additional heat transfer into the HX from the warm hearth, granted it would not be 100%, but even 50% would be significant as the delta T is greatly reduced... especially since my incoming water is in the mid 40's during the cold months.
With that said, how warm does your hearth get? Thoughts on doing something like this?