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PV immersion heater proportional control

Discuss PV immersion heater proportional control in the Solar PV Forum | Solar Panels Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net

Yes, the Immersion was installed on Monday. Installation is straightforward provided time is taken to read the manual first. I’m very impressed and so is my customer, he mentioned that the boiler is hardly running at all and water is always hot.
 
My Immersun is performing well, so far I have used 54kwh to heat the water, all of which would have been consumed by the grid with no monitary gain by me because my Solar installation is a free install & maintainence for 25years.

Brian, then yours was a very smart move! - A lot of those that have the free installs don't realise that they won't use a significant amount of what is generated without changing habits etc. Well done, and thank you for your input and feedback.


@gr7 good to hear.
 
Yes, the Immersion was installed on Monday. Installation is straightforward provided time is taken to read the manual first. I’m very impressed and so is my customer, he mentioned that the boiler is hardly running at all and water is always hot.


Hi,

So does the unit sit next to the consumer unit and you just wire the immersion circuit through it? or are there two parts to it?

What happens when you have a programmer elsewhere that usually controls the hot water? do you simply set that to permanently on and use the new box to program the hot water separately?

Thanks
 
The most convenient location for the unit is adjacent to the CU with immersion circuit wired through it, there is also a sensor which needs to be clipped around the tails. I have just fitted one today where the Immersun replaced an existing timer and controls used to bring in the immersion heater on economy 7 and operate the dual immersion heaters. The Immersun has a built in timer which has been programmed to do the same job only in a more elegant mannner. In this case the sensor lead was extended to around 3m in length to reach the meter tails downstairs.
 
We install EMMA and are now installing Immersun. The Emma is grossly over priced and we have to wait and see with Immersun?
I agree Blueflash, the Emma is a very high cost outlay especially for a "retro install". I have said the cost could only be justified when the Emma was installed at the same time as the PV system.This way the high price of the Emma could be hidden in the overall system price.
I can now give an update to the Immersun device I have been testing. The device has exceeded my expectations and can report after a month of testing that it does everything it says in its specification. The maximum output I have been able to monitor has been 2.9kw over a period of about an hour and the excellent heat sink and case design has meant the temperature rise of the device is minimal. I decided to turn off the central heating boiler completely from the outset of this trial, to see if the Immersun and solar power were able to heat the hot water enough to the level at which we have been used when soley the gas boiler.I am pleased to report up to now (nearly 4 weeks of use) there has not been a need to augment the system using the gas boiler.
For testing purposes I have fitted a digital electronic thermometer 3/4 way up the hot tank to monitor the tank temerature and set the immersion heater thermostat t0 65 degrees C ( the gas boiler water temperature is set to 55 C. I must say that we have been much less waistful in use of the hot water by not leaving the hot tap running unecessary!

After a month now the Immersun has almost become "transparent" to me. I have now taken all the measurements that I require and am almost taking the Immersun for granted already.
I will carry out one more extension to the wiring to add the boiler control which will enable the Immersun device to control the Boiler hot water mode during the winter months to maximise the systems efficiency when the solar power is greatly reduced.
 
Im making some enquiries about getting an ImmerSun device myself, certainly the anecdotal evidence seems to be mounting up in its favour. Im just waiting for a reply now from a nearby supplier & fitter to see if Im in his catchment area or not.
 
Im making some enquiries about getting an ImmerSun device myself, certainly the anecdotal evidence seems to be mounting up in its favour. Im just waiting for a reply now from a nearby supplier & fitter to see if Im in his catchment area or not.

I may be able to give you a suppliers contact with or without an install package.It is very easy to install.I have attached a photo of the one I'm trailing at the moment.
Isolator & Immersun.jpg
 
Not necessarily - download the installation manual from their website - can be used for anything that is 'resistive' - immersion/storage heaters/towel rails etc.

Yes i understand it can be used for heating as well etc but was mainly on about water heating, when used in this context it heats the top element? and the bottom one carries on as normal via heating controls if the top has not heated enough etc?
 
Yes i understand it can be used for heating as well etc but was mainly on about water heating, when used in this context it heats the top element? and the bottom one carries on as normal via heating controls if the top has not heated enough etc?

You could wire it to the bottom one if you wanted!

Usually the bottom one is associated with off peak so may need a bit of jiggery pokery to allow a 'top-up' with off-peak.
 
You can wire it to both immersions if you have two. It has output 'load sensing' and a 'changeover relay' with several different software selectable options on how the relay is used. So with 2 immersions, you wire the top one as the primary via the relays NC contacts and the lower immersion as the secondary via the relay's NO contacts. The immersun then (proportionally) feeds to the top immersion until such time the top of the tank gets to temperature and the thermostat in the top immersion goes open circuit. The immersun then detects there's no longer a load on the primary output, so it switches the relay and now applies proportional output to the secondary (lower immersion). It periodically checks the primary load and will restart supplying it when it comes back in circuit.
We've wired one up similar to this so that it first heats the HWC via the immersion then switches to the element in the towel rail.
 
You can wire it to both immersions if you have two. It has output 'load sensing' and a 'changeover relay' with several different software selectable options on how the relay is used. So with 2 immersions, you wire the top one as the primary via the relays NC contacts and the lower immersion as the secondary via the relay's NO contacts. The immersun then (proportionally) feeds to the top immersion until such time the top of the tank gets to temperature and the thermostat in the top immersion goes open circuit. The immersun then detects there's no longer a load on the primary output, so it switches the relay and now applies proportional output to the secondary (lower immersion). It periodically checks the primary load and will restart supplying it when it comes back in circuit.
We've wired one up similar to this so that it first heats the HWC via the immersion then switches to the element in the towel rail.

If the bottom one is wired off the E7 and is switched on by your electricity meter through an MCB in the board, would the Immersun allow the off peak element to come on in the 7 hours overnight if the water wasnt hot enough, can it be wired to allow this, or would you simply wire through this and setup the on board timer to run for the 7 hours of the economy 7 period for that element. If you get what i mean?

because during the day it wouldnt allow any immersion to be switched on unless it had enough power, so will it allow the power through during the night when there is none?
 
There is a volt free pair of change over relay contacts that you can route to the bottom immersion heater and have the common connected to the immersion heater live ,the normally closed contact would be connected to the E7 and the normally open would connect to the CU 240 ac.
When th immersun was satisfied for heat by the top immersion heater then the bottom immersion would be supplied by 240 v normal CU supply. When the immersun was not supplying any surplus power and both immersion heaters were satisfied then then the E7 supply wiring would always mimic the way before the Immersun was installed.So after dark (no Solar PV) your E7 would operate as normal.

I hope this helps
 
Yes it is. In the photo above you can see it is feeding 647W into the immersion. It works by keeping the export between 30W and 70W wherever there is an excess being generated. It will work with any sized resistive load up to about 5.5kW. At the moment it's driving the immersion but will shortly have a couple of towel radiator elements hanging off it too.
 
I can now give an update to the Immersun device I have been testing. The device has exceeded my expectations and can report after a month of testing that it does everything it says in its specification.

Sounds very encouraging results. Our Immersun is getting installed Wednesday. Currently we have the gas boiler programmed to heat water for 1hr in the morning and 1hr in the evening, with the thermostat set to 55C. The 3kW immersion is at the bottom of the 200litre tank (new build so well insulated, 1C loss per day) but was until now just a backup in case of boiler failure. Once the Immersun is installed the initial plan is to keep the boiler programmed, but only for the evening in case it's been a rubbish day, but to reduce the thermostat to 45C and to set the immersion thermostat to be 55C.

After a while of testing that out, the next stage will be ramp up the immersion's thermostat much higher, to increase the energy we can dump, but to fix a blending valve to mix down the hot water to a safer 50C or so. This should reduce the probability of needing to 'top up' with gas heating, and also solves our issue of having our thermostat too low currently to prevent Legionnaires (because we have a toddler in the house and another on the way).

Throughout all this we will monitor the gas usage to monitor the effectiveness of the Immersun as well as tracking how many kWh it dumps into the tank. Hopefully it will be at least another month or two before the central heating (gas) has to be put back on, prior to then our gas consumption will be solely for water heating (and will hopefully be negligible).
 
Quote Sounds very encouraging results. Our Immersun is getting installed Wednesday. Currently we have the gas boiler programmed to heat water for 1hr in the morning and 1hr in the evening, with the thermostat set to 55C. The 3kW immersion is at the bottom of the 200litre tank (new build so well insulated, 1C loss per day) but was until now just a backup in case of boiler failure. Once the

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Yes, the only downside to me setting the immersion heater thermostat hight to 65 degrees C is the very hot water I like the idea of a blending valve.Fortunately we don't have full time youngsters in the house only visiting Grandchildren which we can keep an eye on.
 
Yes, the only downside to me setting the immersion heater thermostat hight to 65 degrees C is the very hot water I like the idea of a blending valve.Fortunately we don't have full time youngsters in the house only visiting Grandchildren which we can keep an eye on.

If anyone has both hot and cold water pipes near to each other in the airing cupboard, and sufficient pressure for each then a blending valve should be a relatively trivial job for a plumber to fit.

I look forward to comparing results with you Brian. Do you have any estimate of the Gas kWh's saved in the first month?
 
I look forward to comparing results with you Brian. Do you have any estimate of the Gas kWh's saved in the first month?

So far I have managed to get enough hot water to enable the Gas Boiler to be turned off for 32 days since the installation of the Immersun. It also depends on the total size of the hot water tank and the depth that the immersion heater (Top Mounted) extends down into the tank.Ours is 1050 mm high and the immersion heater is 36" in length. Hence it does heat virtually down to the bottom of the tank which gives about 130 litres capacity. The tank is rated at total water capacity of144 litres.
The savings in Gas over the 32 days is @ 3.556pence/kwh x average gas consumption x 17.6 kwh = about 62.6 pence per day to heat the water. There is a 21p / day standing charge but I have to pay this anyway so this is not included in the calculations.
Multiply this by 32 days so far = £ 20 total gas saved.
Obviously it won't be as high as this in the winter months but there will be a saving.
I have attached the installation shot. I'm trialling this device and found the MK grid switches very conveinient.



Immersun Complete Installation.jpg
 
Thanks for the information Brian. Our 200 litre tank is 1.45m tall, but the immersion is positioned around 35-40cm from the bottom so there is plenty of water above the element to heat (about 150 litres by my reckoning). It's only a 13" element but I don't think this should affect things too much as it is horizontally mounted in the tank.

It's a shame 'No Standing Charge' tariffs are few & far between these days, otherwise we could eliminate that pesky 21p/day during the warmer quarters of the year (assuming you don't cook with gas).
 

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