New idea
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I'm more curious how a hot water main works? Is there just millions of miles of heated pipes underground? And I thought a gas boiler was inefficient.
Any time you want hot water, you need to wait for all of the water between your house and the heating facility to drain before you get hot water. It can help to coordinate with your neighbours.
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This post did not contain any content.wrote last edited by [email protected]
Why is the milk pipeline so huge? Planning on using 10x milk compared to water?
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Any time you want hot water, you need to wait for all of the water between your house and the heating facility to drain before you get hot water. It can help to coordinate with your neighbours.
Wait. That's a different problem than hot water just from my basement. The basement is slow, but has nothing to do with neighbors. I think we live in different countries.
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Wasn't there some discussion or pilot implementation of beer lines ?
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Make sure you let your milk line drip overnight if you're up north. Otherwise the pipes will freeze.
I'll save the drip, I'd like sour milk after sitting by the time I need to use the tap.
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Wait. That's a different problem than hot water just from my basement. The basement is slow, but has nothing to do with neighbors. I think we live in different countries.
The mains are shared with your neighbours, so a hot water main would also be shared with neighbours. So just like running the hot water in the bathroom sink before a shower means hot water gets to the shower quicker, with hot water mains, your neighbour having a hot shower before you means you'll see hot water sooner.
Though my country does not have hot water mains. I wouldn't be surprised if the heat losses are enough that even sharing a water heater between unattached neighbours is less efficient than both using their own heaters, let alone a whole city doing that. Though maybe tropical areas could do it.
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Wasn't there some discussion or pilot implementation of beer lines ?
Victoriocity has a town with hot coffee infrastructure
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Why is the milk pipeline so huge? Planning on using 10x milk compared to water?
A family of five will use up to 50 gallons of milk a day performing their regular colon cleansing enema. A larger pipeline is not only important for the volume needed to complete the enemas, but also reduces the pressure. this increases the safety of the public and allows them to calm their bowels through milk-meditative-medicine, sponsored by 3M.
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Wasn't there some discussion or pilot implementation of beer lines ?
Idiocracy already came up with that
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I'm more curious how a hot water main works? Is there just millions of miles of heated pipes underground? And I thought a gas boiler was inefficient.
wrote last edited by [email protected]There's a few places that use the water runoff from a nuclear power plant to provide hot water or heating to surrounding homes. Apparently they only have a lose about 3% of the heat and can supply a 100km area.
Obviously the pipes probably don't look like that