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  1. #1
    Days Work Done! Norton's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by dennis4558 View Post
    What size pump do you use? Any recommendations. I see they say on their website that even the smallest pump can be used for 2 floors.
    WP-155Q5 pump.

    https://www.mitsubishi-kyw.co.th/Pro...-Pump/924.aspx

    I have single storey house with 8 hot/cold mixer faucets. The pump gives plenty of pressure.

    Have an electric boiler hot water heater. 100 liter.

    ???????????????????????????? ???? EHS | Stiebel Eltron

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thai Dhupp View Post
    clever device that discards the first flush of water (filled with dust), before tanking the rest
    I doubt that it brings something, even if it works properly. You are getting everyday the dust on the roof even next day after the rain. And this is not much the dust from the road but a fine dust from the surrounding vegetation. Then, it get changed into a black mud that you will find at the bottom of the tank after one year.

    The problem with the plastic tanks is that the drain opening (the lower one of the two) is just 1" and not really on the bottom level. Luckily, the water helps itself, it sediments very good and the dirt staying at the bottom does not influence much the outlet.

  3. #3
    Days Work Done! Norton's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thai Dhupp View Post
    I guess we will put it all to bed with I'm there in May.
    Indeed. He will be your best source for local practices.

  4. #4
    Thailand Expat Airportwo's Avatar
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    Cistern in a roof void in a house with 3m high ceiling would be at a max height of say 8m, 8m x 1.42 (psi of water per m) = 11.37 psi at the lowest level of house, pump will not run at such a low pressure, so the hydrostatic will not influence pump is how I see it.
    Starting and stopping a motor will obviously wear it out quicker, true - but I have never had the motor on a pump fail, the fluid end will fail long before the motor will, thats why they usually guarantee the motor and not the fluid side. Having a pressure vessel of some sort in the system will reduce the starting and stopping of the pump.
    Solar water heater, to me is again hard to justify, the cost of the system would take a lifetime to recoup - if ever.
    Last edited by Airportwo; 31-03-2018 at 09:33 PM.

  5. #5
    Thailand Expat David48atTD's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Airportwo View Post
    Solar water heater, to me is again hard to justify, the cost of the system would take a lifetime to recoup - if ever.
    ... + 1

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by David48atTD View Post
    ... + 1
    LOL... I'm sensing 'resistance'.....

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by Airportwo View Post
    Cistern in a roof void in a house with 3m high ceiling would be at a max height of say 8m, 8m x 1.42 (psi of water per m) = 11.37 psi at the lowest level of house, pump will not run at such a low pressure, so the hydrostatic will not influence pump is how I see it.
    Starting and stopping a motor will obviously wear it out quicker, true - but I have never had the motor on a pump fail, the fluid end will fail long before the motor will, thats why they usually guarantee the motor and not the fluid side. Having a pressure vessel of some sort in the system will reduce the starting and stopping of the pump.
    Solar water heater, to me is again hard to justify, the cost of the system would take a lifetime to recoup - if ever.
    Cheers AP2... I got to consider everything but I hear where you are coming from!

    Let's see if I can make it work...

  8. #8
    Thailand Expat David48atTD's Avatar
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    ^

    It's difficult.

    You have a dream, the coin plus a passion and drive to build/live according to principles which are admirable and aspirational


    I'm a Greenie, but I'm an Economic Greenie. In other words, I'm saving the world in ways it makes economic sense
    for me. A variation on think globally - act locally.

    In the West, I have solar cells on the roof and an inverter. Only 1.5KW because I bought it 4 years ago and the scheme
    wasn't explained very well. It has a feed-in tariff (the price I get for my electricity) is twice the price that you buy the
    electricity for from the generating company.
    But that tarriff is no longer is available to new installations, so I can't upgrade.

    I'd cover my western roofline with additional panels in a heartbeat as the panels have the added benefit, IMO of reducing
    the amount of heating of the roof tiles, thus the roof cavity. Passive solar cooling

    I have a thermostatically controlled roof vent. It comes on when the temperature reaches a predetermined mark.
    Saves power and keeps us a little cooler.

    We harvest rain water for the garden. There is a hole in one of the downpipes and I stick a big bucket under it.
    Then use it to water the garden. I pull the plug from the kids bath and see that valuable resource go down the
    drain hole and think ... what a waste.

    In the West and in Thailand we drive an LPG car.

    We grow our own veges. It's cheaper, teaches the kids and, of course ... lower average food miles.

    We compost because our soil is very sandy and the added nutrients and water holding capacity is needed.

    We have an electric lawn mower.

    The list is endless.

    I have Scottish lineage, plus my Dad lived through the depression, my Mum came from a Farm (so did Dad) ...
    accordingly we were taught not to waste ANYTHING, especially money

    We translate little of that to Thailand. It would be to expensive. It's expensive because the utilities cost little and
    the infrastructure costs a packet.

    ---

    At the end of the day, it's your build. Your Dream.

    It's a great thread to read and contribute to and you do an excellent job populating it with images and anecdotes.

    We can just contribute some of the information gap that we have gained by living here.
    Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago ...


  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by David48atTD View Post
    ^

    It's difficult.

    You have a dream, the coin plus a passion and drive to build/live according to principles which are admirable and aspirational


    I'm a Greenie, but I'm an Economic Greenie. In other words, I'm saving the world in ways it makes economic sense
    for me. A variation on think globally - act locally.

    In the West, I have solar cells on the roof and an inverter. Only 1.5KW because I bought it 4 years ago and the scheme
    wasn't explained very well. It has a feed-in tariff (the price I get for my electricity) is twice the price that you buy the
    electricity for from the generating company.
    But that tarriff is no longer is available to new installations, so I can't upgrade.

    I'd cover my western roofline with additional panels in a heartbeat as the panels have the added benefit, IMO of reducing
    the amount of heating of the roof tiles, thus the roof cavity. Passive solar cooling

    I have a thermostatically controlled roof vent. It comes on when the temperature reaches a predetermined mark.
    Saves power and keeps us a little cooler.

    We harvest rain water for the garden. There is a hole in one of the downpipes and I stick a big bucket under it.
    Then use it to water the garden. I pull the plug from the kids bath and see that valuable resource go down the
    drain hole and think ... what a waste.

    In the West and in Thailand we drive an LPG car.

    We grow our own veges. It's cheaper, teaches the kids and, of course ... lower average food miles.

    We compost because our soil is very sandy and the added nutrients and water holding capacity is needed.

    We have an electric lawn mower.

    The list is endless.

    I have Scottish lineage, plus my Dad lived through the depression, my Mum came from a Farm (so did Dad) ...
    accordingly we were taught not to waste ANYTHING, especially money

    We translate little of that to Thailand. It would be to expensive. It's expensive because the utilities cost little and
    the infrastructure costs a packet.

    ---

    At the end of the day, it's your build. Your Dream.

    It's a great thread to read and contribute to and you do an excellent job populating it with images and anecdotes.

    We can just contribute some of the information gap that we have gained by living here.

    Great post David, and seems like you and I are on the same page.

    I can relate, agree with or aspire to action most of what you have written (cant get a gas-powered truck just yet).

    It's about finding the balance with what you want to achieve and what it will cost. A very important balance. You found yours, I'm still looking but I may well end up almost identical.

    That's not to say of course that later, mods / improvements cant be made to push towards your aspirations.

    Like you I was always told to 'waste not want not', something my family also followed all the way through. My Mum is coming 91 next month but has followed this all her life.

    An inspiration for me.

    Oh.. and 'contributing to the information gap'? Please don't stop that one!!

    I'm learning so much through the kind members taking the time to read and respond. I think we are all benefiting and long may that continue.

    Thanks

  10. #10
    Thailand Expat Airportwo's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by David48atTD View Post
    ^
    We compost because our soil is very sandy and the added nutrients and water holding capacity is needed..
    I think this is a very good point, we compost whatever we can which means what is thrown out is minimum, all food scraps are either eaten by the dogs or composted, the "composter" is used daily and positioned to be usable! if you compost correctly there are no odors involved, it actually smells 'sweet" !

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Airportwo View Post
    I think this is a very good point, we compost whatever we can which means what is thrown out is minimum, all food scraps are either eaten by the dogs or composted, the "composter" is used daily and positioned to be usable! if you compost correctly there are no odors involved, it actually smells 'sweet" !
    We will also be doing this rather than filling garbage bags unnecessarily. Put the goodness back in the land.

  12. #12
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    I am leaning more towards solar heating than power but I'm interested to know how you decided to do what you are doing...

    TD I'm very interested in what you find out on solar water heating, my wife has already said she want hot water in both kitchens plus bathrooms. I know it is somewhat spendy but with a little shopping may find something somewhat reasonable. I think the ones with the big tanks on the roof look ugly but others with solar panel on roof and tank located somewhere in the house would be a good option.
    Others may disagree

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by dennis4558 View Post
    I am leaning more towards solar heating than power but I'm interested to know how you decided to do what you are doing...

    TD I'm very interested in what you find out on solar water heating, my wife has already said she want hot water in both kitchens plus bathrooms. I know it is somewhat spendy but with a little shopping may find something somewhat reasonable. I think the ones with the big tanks on the roof look ugly but others with solar panel on roof and tank located somewhere in the house would be a good option.
    Others may disagree
    Denis, hi...

    yeah when I get the telescopes swung in the solar heating direction hopefully I can share something. Im sure many have looked at this already.

    I figure with solar heating even if you partially heat up some water before passing it into your home system its beneficial. ie. 50% electricity use rather than 100%.

    Yes, I know electricity is cheap but who is to say it will remain so?

    There is worldwide pressure on energy source / energy use, meaning the cost is unlikely to stagnate or go down. be prepared! who knows what the future holds?

    Baht used to be up around 70 to the pound? now its, what? 45? oil was cheap in the middle east, now countries are rushing to add VAT as revenue provider and pump prices are rising.

    Maybe Thailand will increase gas revenue in a similar way (pump prices in Thailand are very similar to UAE, for example). My experience is... we never get a 'nice surprise' with pricing... its always moving in the wrong way. As long as my health holds up, I plan to be in this house 30+ years or more!! A lot can happen in 30 years...

    So if i can get some free heat, albeit after the set up cost, I'm definitely going to look into it.

    I will probably have some water heating arrangement over the covered car area as I do not want those panels on my roof.

    Anyway.. will keep everyone posted...

  14. #14
    On a walkabout Loy Toy's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Airportwo View Post
    Solar water heater, to me is again hard to justify, the cost of the system would take a lifetime to recoup - if ever.
    I have a Solar unit on the roof of our house and it has been working flawlessly for over 15 years.

    Services 6 bathrooms and two kitchens and you could almost boil an egg in the hot water produced and the gravity feed gives great pressure.

    The only problem I have found is after 2 days of overcast weather the unit cannot recover quick enough to maintain hot water.

    Manufactured in Thailand and did not cost a fortune, from memory around 40,000 baht.

  15. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by Loy Toy View Post
    I have a Solar unit on the roof of our house and it has been working flawlessly for over 15 years.

    Services 6 bathrooms and two kitchens and you could almost boil an egg in the hot water produced and the gravity feed gives great pressure.

    The only problem I have found is after 2 days of overcast weather the unit cannot recover quick enough to maintain hot water.

    Manufactured in Thailand and did not cost a fortune, from memory around 40,000 baht.
    Thats pretty impressive performance LT, sounds like you have a greet system.

    I definitely want to know more about what it consists of...

  16. #16
    Thailand Expat lom's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Loy Toy View Post
    The only problem I have found is after 2 days of overcast weather the unit cannot recover quick enough to maintain hot water.
    You can add an electric heater element to it,one which kicks in when the water temp goes below x degrees.

  17. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by lom View Post
    You can add an electric heater element to it,one which kicks in when the water temp goes below x degrees.
    Hi Iom, yeah I was thinking the same in any system I use, for continuity...

  18. #18
    Days Work Done! Norton's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by David48atTD View Post
    At the end of the day, it's your build. Your Dream.
    Wot he said but best to keep it simple and locally available service. More stuff, more maintenance.

  19. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Norton View Post
    Wot he said but best to keep it simple and locally available service. More stuff, more maintenance.
    That's the number 1 rule, of course, Norton... no need to over-complicate anything.

  20. #20
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    Pouring the 1st floor ring beam.


    Its..all hands to the p...concrete!


    They are placing using K.Pot's in-company skip and crane


    Non-stop crane and regular delivery


    Rather them up there than me...


    The ladies were up there too, in the thick of it.


    Good to see the side spacers in use to centralise the re-bar


    The girls are hard workers.


    This section finished but lots more to do


    I don't fancy walking about on those lower level battens!


    You got to be fit, agile, with good balance and not scared of height if you are on K.Pot's building crew.


    Still pouring...


    Good teamwork to control that skip







    More pix coming...

  21. #21
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    Anyway... time to pick up where we left off on the progress and photos...

  22. #22
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    Vibrating the concrete into the rebar






  23. #23
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    Casting the bathroom slabs...














  24. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by Airportwo View Post
    takes 5 minutes to clean surface tanks.
    5 minutes? I have got one more (on surface) to clean. May I invite you to help me? My post before yours...

  25. #25
    Thailand Expat Airportwo's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Klondyke View Post
    5 minutes? I have got one more (on surface) to clean. May I invite you to help me? My post before yours...
    Unfortunately I have to decline your kind offer to assist due to acute laziness and aversion to work!
    You have highlighted one of the reasons I don't collect rainwater, mine get a light coating of fine solids on the bottom, easy to wash out in 5 minutes or soooo.....
    Well water has a 30 micron filter before going into tank, city water has no filter TDS is surprisingly good at around 100.

    One thing worth checking on the water systems is the PH, water here tends to be quite acidic, you find out fairly quickly which water fittings are "quality"!

    I don't find the surface tanks to be aesthetically ugly, they are necessary, if they are well plumbed in and piping neat and orderly = "industrial chic" my background is in construction, doubtless affects my view point.

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