Hold on , is 4.2 the coolant in the system ?
No. The 4.2 is part of the formula so that stays the same as does the 3600.
All you need to tell the formula is how much water you want to heat and how much the temperature rise required is.
So lets say you have my 1.5lpm of flow you want to heat and you need the temperature to rise to 45 degrees C from 9 degrees.
So we have 4.2 x 90 liters per hour x 36 = 13608 ÷ 3600 = 3.78kwh.
But also consider that this is a lot more complex than this. All this formula does is to take one single rise in temperature of 90 liters of water by 36 degrees. It doesn't take into account any form of heat loss.
If you let the system recycle that heated water then everything changes. Now you need the same amount of heat to raise the temperature of the water from 45 degrees C by 36 degrees so you now have 81 degrees C after your second pass.
I know this is confusing because I ran this system on full throttle and was only able to extract a temperature of 35 degrees. The water after the heat exchanger was cold so that says to me that as the water going to my brush was taking every scrap of heat from the boiler (transfer of heat from the internal hot water side to the side going to the brush.)
Now had I left the boiler to heat up the internal water circuit then it would have probably given me a much higher temperature at the brush head. Yes, I would have zapped more heat from the boiler circuit when I cleaned the back 2 upstairs windows, But when I switch my tap off to drag the hose to clean the side and front windows its giving the boiler a chance to recover the heat I've taken, putting it back into the header tank to store it for later when I start cleaning again.
Hence the reason why PF tell a purchaser to preheat the system so its up running and hot when the cleaner starts cleaning his first house.
Your gas heater works totally differently as it heats the water going to your brush in the internal heat exchanger. It only gets to do that once. It is a true heat on demand heater.