Wind Up


I was having a sandwich lunch down at Tyrella beach on the Co Down coast back in late September and went for a walk afterwards and found this thing half-buried in the sand. It turned out to be a boat immersion heater of some sort (I don't own a boat so maybe someone can enlighten me). There was an electrical element and 2 pipes coming out of the top and the bottom connection you can see in the photo. It must have been thrown overboard (assuming the boat it was on didn't sink!), maybe after being replaced. It had been in the sea a while by the looks of it, but being stainless steel it has started to polish up quite nicely. The lid is held on by 6 bolts and I gutted all the old gubbins out of it to get the cylinder itself.


Anyway, the basic plan is to wind 1 or 2 tight coils of 8mm microbore copper pipe like in the photo above and make a heat exchanger out of the cylinder. I've had a go at winding this type of coil before and it isn't easy, but I'd like to try again. You need to fill the pipe with salt, sand or something and pack it tightly enough to stop the pipe kinking. The guy who wound the one above says on his website he used very dry salt that had been finely ground in a food processor, the advantage being that the salt is easy to wash out of the pipe afterwards.

Comments

  1. i prefer wet sand as it can be place under a bit more presure and holds the shape better i have a large roll of 10 mil pipe lying here at the minute

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  2. How did you manage to get the wet sand into 10mm microbore pipe? I had trouble getting dry ground salt into it.

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