| Figure: A The fuel supply is readily available from the acreage he is clearing. |
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Figure: A
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Figure: B
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Figure: C
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| Figure: B This is an innovation that suits Freeman’s needs. Instead of the heated water going straight to the house he has built a storage unit composed of a stainless-steel liner he scrounged from a dairy. He then built an outer shell of pressure-treated plywood and the space in between is insulated with blue foam sheets. |
| Figure: C Just inside the house is the main switching area for the heated water. Freeman has also allowed an extra valve for expansion. The smaller zone valves above control heat going in to each room. |
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Figure: D
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Figure: E
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Figure: F
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| Figure: D The gray tank stores water from the well. Bath and kitchen water are not directly hooked up to the flow from the outdoor furnace. Instead, this heated water flows through a stainless-steel transfer case which acts much like a heat exchanger for a Venmar™ system. A separate water supply from the well is heated through this process and goes into a water heater for storage for the kitchen and bathrooms. Because the water is already heated the water heater is really just a storage container but can kick to heat the water in if there is a problem with the outdoor furnace system. |
| Figure: E This picture shows how the tubing is laid for the in-floor heat which is water that comes directly from the outdoor furnace. |
| Figure: F This is the basement view of the pipes which provide heating for the zones. The lighter pipes show the cold water return to the valves where the water is then directed back outdoors to the furnace boiler. These pipes will be covered when the basement is finished off. |
We were talking in class a painting during the Renaissance period . It was a classy painting about life in general throughout those times. There were people in the painting doing their daily routines and the painting was like a portal of the earlier period.