your theory of using heat from engine is half correct as I thought about this last winter but this then grew into using a marine calorfier http://www.asap-supplies.com/marine/boat-hot-water-heaters
these use the hot water in an engines cooling system to warm the cold water on a boat via heat exchange however I rekon it can be modified for a vehicle and i have got as far as thinking quite a bit about this ... need a calorfier, an extra pipe teed into the vans coolant hoses, another shurflo on a switch to push water from vans tank thru calorfier and back into tank on a constant loop and an in tank thermometer to check water temp in tank as ian lancaster stated diminishing supply thru day will make water too hot possibly (not done it yey so not sure) ...... maybe someone cleverer than me can think of a more direct hot water to the brush head way of doing it ??
not sure if it would work but u can get very small calorfiers plus no cost to heat it up .......... was gonna try it and then tell the forum how I got on but maybe someone else may like to beat me to it and save me a few hundred quid if its fails
Hi Ian,
Hurricane heaters do a compact diesel heater that they have adapted for window cleaners. It contains its own diesel burner as a heat source. From what I gather they also incorporate a calorifier type of system in their design. They use the calorifier in reverse as a heat source.
The diesel heater heats all the 20 litres in the calorifier and the water to be heated (our wfp water from the pump to the pole) is past through the heat exchanger within the calorifier which heats the water on demand. Again this water temperature is regulated with a mixer valve.
I contacted each of the calorifier manufacturers a couple of years ago and asked if I could use a Webasto diesel heater to heat the water in the calorifier as a heat source and pump my wfp water through the heat exchanger in the same way as a Hurricane heater. Again, opposite to the way they have designed it. They said that the heat exchanger is simply a length of copper tube (around 6 foot) and won't zap enough heat as the water passes through it too quickly. ( I can't remember the figures but at 2 LPM flowrate the water was only in the heat exchanger (their 6' copper tube) for a few brief moments - 2. something secs I think it was.)
We were in Scotland at the time on holiday staying at a newly built cottage near Fort William. The house was oil heated and they used the oil burner to heat all the water in the hot water tank. The heat exchanger was good enough to heat water for the bath using the 210 litre tank as a heat source. The oil burner got that 210 litre tank hot in about 15 minutes.
The owner of the cottage was quite into this and he got me thinking on these lines.
One of these calorifier manufacturers suggested I buy one and report back to them my findings.
There are some slightly larger units that have 2 heat exchangers. One is for the engine coolant circuit and the other is for another heat source ie a diesel heater. One manufacturer also suggested that linking the 2 of these together won't raise the wfp water temperature enough to use.