I see people building solar boxes and filling up the box w/ aluminum cans, dryer vent, etc. I don't get it. How is this more efficient than using a plain sheet of the foam board w/ the metal coating (or any kind of non-tubular flat surface)? Why would it be any better to run the air through a black tube (heating the air indirectly) than it would to heat the air directly under a glass panel? And it can't be a thermal mass for storage -- you would want any storage inside the home, not inside the furnace, right? I suppose corrugated metal increases your surface area, but even then, there is only so much energy shining into the window at any one time.
AND ANOTHER THING
!
I've seen other people who build a furnace/can box, and then just tape it to an existing window. In the words of "Oh Brother..." "That don't make no sense. X amount of suns rays/energy/heat are entering that window whether there is a box or not. The advantage of a solar furnace is just that it, in essence, increases your home's window area -- more passive solar (albeit, without the heat loss of a regular window since it doesn't cut a massive hole in your house like a window does).
I building a solar furnace for my chicken coop. Warm birds are laying birds.
AND ANOTHER THING


I've seen other people who build a furnace/can box, and then just tape it to an existing window. In the words of "Oh Brother..." "That don't make no sense. X amount of suns rays/energy/heat are entering that window whether there is a box or not. The advantage of a solar furnace is just that it, in essence, increases your home's window area -- more passive solar (albeit, without the heat loss of a regular window since it doesn't cut a massive hole in your house like a window does).
I building a solar furnace for my chicken coop. Warm birds are laying birds.