Anyone built a solar powered space heater for their coop?

I am curious about this too.

Can RocketDad elaborate about the flat black paint and how exactly you would use it?
 
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I have seen better designs built right on the wall...no loss of heat through the hose or back and sides of the box. My husband built one...just never got it installed...still in the garage with ten jillion other things!
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From what I've found out so far...the black paint is to be applied to anything (soda cans, pvc pipe, etc.) that will be "collecting" the heat. Black because is collects more heat than any other color.

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Well, to start. Solar Energy for heat. You can do it a few ways.
1. solar energy pretty much becomes heat as it strikes the earth. so the most direct route, but not necessarily the cheapest is simply to capture that heat and store it. This generally requires some way to circulate a fluid through a collector panel and then transfer that heat to a holding tank (Even a well insulated hot water heater can serve) so related costs are all the materials for the collector panel which usually includes a copper sheet (Expensive) and lots of copper tubing (again expensive). A pump and the storage tank/pit, or whatever and the related expense of insulating that storage tank. the hardest part of a system like this is calculating just how big it needs to be but most people that do find out they can be surprisingly small if built well.

2. convert light to electricity and then store that for later use through an electric heater. Usually a much more straight forward and understandable way. the least efficient but the energy is free and otherwise always completely wasted. But can still be a little pricey when you start shopping for batteries and such for storing electricity.

3. Passive solar. this is probably the most acceptable method of harvesting Solar heat of them all. It require no pumps, tubes, expensive copper panels and what not. Additional costs are general minimal. But as a general rule in order to have it you have to either include it in something before it is built or be willing to rebuild to add it. One of the simplest forms of passive solar heat is south facing windows. But they can and do get far more complicated, creative and effective. In a nut shell passive solar heat is simply anything that allows your coop to warm up when the sun shines yet keeps it that way all the time the sun is not shining. As a rule they need to be designed by an engineer. they take into account conditions that are specific to your location such as mean sun hours and average temperatures, wind conditions and many other factors. But when they work they work. I know of one system that kept a house heated for 30 days of cloudy days and still was no where near running out of energy. And that was at constant sub freezing temperatures outside. and in this case the system is it not only cheap, it can be outright free. a coop with a south facing window with a 30 gal drum of water setting so the sun shines on it all day will then release that heat all night. sort of an example of how it could work and work cheap.
 
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I heat my chicken building with a greenhouse-ified chamber on the front (it doubles as a run, but you CANNOT just plastic-wrap your run to achieve this). It works very very well, IF you have good thermal mass to carry the heat overnight.

Photovoltaic coop heating is going to be outrageously expensive and un-worthwhile.

Pat
 
Try this site: http://www.builditsolar.com/

Also
, using PV (photovoltaic) for heat is very inefficient, although PV can make electricity to power a heater, or bowl heating element. However, if that is the sole purpose for PV and you are aware of the inefficiencies.......

Solar space heating is different from solar PV.

Solar hot water is yet different again. I saw in some of the replies in thi sthread where people were mixing apples & oranges. The link to the above site has some excellent thoughts, plans, etc on this topic.
 
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Honestly, that is not easy to do and the bulk of the task consists of insulating the bejeebers out of your waterer on all sides and top and bottom (while leaving somewhere the chickens can drink)... and once you *have* insulated it that thickly, why futz around with electricity at all, just bring hot water out every day
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Seriously.

Pat
 
Sorry to rekindle an old fire here but I have built SEVERAL passive air collectors for heating sheds, garages, greenhouses, and I just built one recently for a friends coop. I will try to get pictures of them. All you really need is some black "drainage pipe", a piece of glass, and the ability to frame it in, you can put in on the south facing side of your coop and get free heat all day. If you wanted heat at night you could filter the heat during the day through a vent into a bag of stones or a tube of stones that will hold some heat overnight.
 

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