no, i dont think so koz hat would be cheating,
My home in the "heath"
There are different types of heat exchangers. To get an answer the type of exchanger and what type of test you want to do should be stated.
Almost all pool heaters use a copper heat exchanger (looks like a radiator; water flows through it; fire heats the outside = hot water). Salt water or fresh water, all pools have chlorine. Over time, chlorine corrodes copper. (As a pool service provider, I have never seen rust stains caused by a copper heat exchanger: the most common causes of rust stains are iron based lawn fertilizer in the pool and metallic objects resting on the bottom too long) Copper will, however, eventually leave blue-green deposits on the plaster surfaces. While I haven't yet seen one, it is my understanding that one or more of the larger pool equipment mfrs. makes a heater with a titanium heat exchanger which does not corrode. Check with Hayward, Pentair, Jandy, etc., but expect to pay big bucks.
no
A condenser boiler has a primary and a secondary heat exchanger. Fuel that is used to simply warm up water can be sent to the secondary heat exchanger and reused. This is a substantially more efficient use of energy.
The use of the LMTD arises straightforwardly from the analysis of a heat exchanger with constant flow rate and fluid thermal properties. It is a simple method to approximated the temperature diving force in a heat exchanger. The LMTD is a logarithmic average of the temperature difference between the hot and cold streams at each end of the exchanger. The larger the LMTD, the more heat is transferred.
Draculaura is not dating Heath burns but she use to like him.Draculaura is continuing to date clawd wolf
We use copper because it is just the right metal to use in all these jobs it does. It is good at what it does
we use copper in wires because it is a conductor of both heat and electricity
Copper
copper does not rust
It is not recommended to use muriatic acid to clean copper, as it can cause damage to the copper surface and potentially lead to discoloration. It is safer to use a specific copper cleaner or a mixture of vinegar and salt to clean copper surfaces effectively.