The pool is 58' long by 21' wide. At the shallow end it is 3' deep and it slopes to 7' 6" at the deep (far end). The angle the picture was taken from doesn't do it justice.
The top panel is adapted from two Solarmatt kits and assembled on a home-made frame of salvaged timber from a demolition site. It is not enclosed but under the pipes a mineral felt skin allows me to collect rainwater which is then filtered and put in the pool. All the water is straight from the sky - proof of how much it rains in Wales!
Together the panels work very well. Each has it's strengths and weaknesses, the Solarmatt is more efficient in strong sunlight than the Navitron system but works just as efficiently as a radiator when insolation drops. A graphs of inlet vs. outlet temperatire differential looks like a profile of the Alps and even a few seconds of shade, such a as cloud passing over, can cause a cooling rather than heating effect.
The biggest problem with the Solarmatt has been squirrells chewing the pipes and it only took them two days to munch through the vacuum release valves! I fixed that by adding a tee (in the far top corner of the picture) and running a pipe up one of the trees so it ended above the pump head height. No water can get out but air can get in to stop the pipes collapsing if it gets drained.
Navitron's pipes work very well, even in gloomy conditions and the vertical mounting should ensure good output even when the sun is low in winter time. Controlling which system to use for optimum output is complicated and for technical reasons, I can't use both at once. It will be automated very shortly but for the time being, I have to manually switch panels every 15 minutes when its sunny or they overheat. I've already managed to melt the 2" ABS water pipes (with water in them) at the heat exchanger twice this year through not watching the time!
When finished, a controller in the house will talk to the pump room via a radio link to allow the whole pool system to be managed remotely. It will monitor all the temperatures and allow control of the pumps, pool lights (LEDs!) and other equipment completely automatically. Keeping the 'brain' of the system indoors will make it much easier to debug and optimise the software. A PV panel and backup battery will keep the control system and pumps running in case of power failure. I hope to keep controller consumption below 5W although the pumps of necessity take considrably more.
There is the start of an article on the smaller but similar control system on
www.atv-projects.com but although it is in daily use, I think I can improve its performance yet more before releasing the full design plans.
Brian.