I just hate it when I get to sit around during the holiday season with nothing but time on my hands. During this time, my brain goes into overdrive and I start thinking of very strange things.
One of those things is the Atwood propane furnace in my CT. It's rated at 12k btu input with only about 9k btu of actual heat generation. The missing 3k btu goes out the exhaust as waste heat. I have been thinking of a way to utilize that waste heat. Currently, I am considering making a removable bracket that would direct the furnaces exhaust to a thermoelectric device. Normally called a peltier device. This is the device that the thermo electric coolers use to make hot or cold. The interesting thing about these devices, is if you heat one side and cool the other, they will generate DC current. I am sure not as much as they would consume making hot/cold, but possibly enough to add a few watts of power back to the battery. The configuration of the device is actually quite simple. You apply heat to a heat sink mounted on the hot side, and have a cooling fan blowing air across a heat sink mounted on the cold side. This transfer of heat is what causes the device to generate electric current. So, the question is, has anyone tried this idea, and if so, how well did it work? Most of my CT adventures has me away from shore power. If I can harness some of the waste heat to help add a little power back to the battery, that would be a very good thing. Running the furnace is the largest load on the battery. assuming a run time of approx 30 minutes each hour, and the furnace consuming 1.8 amps for each hour of run time. After a day of operation, the furnace will have used about 22 amps from the battery. Thats almost 50% of usefull power from the battery. I do not discharge my battery to less than 50% of its rated capacity, so it limits the amount of power I can use to approx 50 amps. So anything I can recover would be helpfull! I have been looking a a 400watt rated device. Thats about 30 amps of generating potential. I doubt that I can generate that much power, but if I could generate just a couple of amps, then running the furnace would have a net positive effect on the battery. Currenty I can get these devices fairly inexpensively on Ebay.
Anyway, just some holiday season pondering. Possibly something to exercise the tired old brain cells with. Any input would be appreciated.
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!
Mitch