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Ground Water
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Heat Exchangers
If land area, without hard rock, is available, a horizontal system is usually the most economic. If the soil conditions are rocky or sandy, then a vertical system may well be the choice. Trenching and drilling costs are obviously major factors.
A horizontal system will use a number of
Slinky coils are popular in residential applications since they use less
trench length, and can be quickly installed in a
A number of boreholes are drilled. Long "hairpin" shaped loops, U-bend pipes, are inserted. They're backfilled, plugged or grouted, and the pipes connected to headers in a trench leading back into the building. The drilling depth is determined by the lowest total cost based on conditions at the job site. Typical borehole depth is 150 to 250 feet. The objective is to install a specific amount of pipe. Spacing vertical boreholes for commercial systems can be done in a variety of ways lines, squares, rectangles, grids depending on available land areas.
These vertical earth coils should also be spaced away from foundations, property lines, utility lines, drain fields, wells and sewage sources. And furthermore . . .
Ground Coupling Systems Design
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