Theres almost no room in the water bay for theProHeat, and still be able to access it for maintenance.I have an odd shaped fresh tank to thank for that. The reservoir should be likely always 100 degrees or warmer (even up to 180 degree cutoff of the ProHeat) so if the reservoir is side-by-side with the water tank, I thought I would have to worry about the fresh water being too hot from the radiant heat.Mark
Thanks for the comments and advice. Keep it coming!!!!!Bob (of the north) and I have discussed the heating system a few times. Since we live (sometimes ) in similar climates, he knows what will work and what will excel, based on his personal experience. I've made a couple of alterations to the plan, namely the engine preheat will be included with the bedroom/bath loop and controlled by a few valves. I dont expect to use the engine preheat, since I have a block heater, but redundancy is not a bad thing and having the valves in the last bay under the bedroom near the engine seems to be a good spot.The front bay (electrical) will have the ProHeat in it; close to the diesel tank and power.The middle bay (freshwater) will hold the 5 gal reservoir, manifolds and pumps; residual heat loss should prevent the freshwater from freezing. Likely the marine hotwater tank will be here also.The last bay presently holds a grey and a black tank. These are to be replaced by a single tank. This tank will sit on a piece of 1.5 inch styroam insulation in which a groove has been routered to accept the Pex pipe on the return from the bedroom/bath loop. This should keep that tank from freezing.I'll run all the lines on the bottom side of the floor, and only pass through the floor for the heater connections.The pumps I have are 1/25 Hp Grundfos pumps (120 volt though). This isnt a problem as we always have the inverter on, and also carry an backup inverter...Too bad you already have those. The solar heat people have some great 12/24 volt pumps.I'm a bit on the fence about the marine water heater, though. Tell me more about the flat plate heat exchanger and how well they work; especially if you have had both, which do you prefer? The plan may change again.I'm looking at the three way RV heater because it can use the heat from the engine/Proheat but you don't have to fire up them to get hot water during the summer.MarkPS: Grant...I didnt show it in the plan, but I will have a fill point and expansion tank in the bathroom, directly above the reservoir. Still got coffee on if you're in the area.Lee...I considered using a hot water tank as the reservoir, but the element size is a concern. If I installed a 1500watt element, that can make quite a diffence in available power if Im plugged into a 30amp service. I think I would likely have the tank custom made (to fit the available space), and I'll foam insulate it when its completed/installed and no leaks. Thanks for the suggestion!
Has anyone installed a small household 120V hot water tank in a bay and plumbed it into the webasto/proheat system. Just thinking, would it work to heat your system when pluged in ? and also would it work with the diesel heater? Could it replace the tank that Mark is thinking of fabricating for his basement bay?