Heliodyne Gobi collectors are the brand's flagship flat-plate solar thermal collector lineup — the heat-capturing element of complete solar water heating systems. Gobi collectors capture solar radiation and transfer it to a heat-transfer fluid (typically propylene glycol antifreeze in closed-loop systems) which then heats water in the storage tank.
Gobi 408 vs Gobi 410 model differences
- Gobi 408: 4-foot x 8-foot collector, ~32 sq ft absorber area, daily heat output 25,000–35,000 BTU in good sun conditions
- Gobi 410: 4-foot x 10-foot, ~40 sq ft absorber area, daily heat output 32,000–45,000 BTU
Sizing depends on hot water demand and local solar resources. Two Gobi 410s typically suffice for a 4-person residential household; the 408 is appropriate for smaller homes or 2-person residences.
Collector construction
Gobi collectors use:
- Selective surface absorber plate: high-absorptivity black coating maximizes heat absorption and minimizes re-radiation
- Copper risers and headers: efficient heat transfer from absorber to fluid
- Tempered glass cover: low-iron glass for high solar transmission, hail-resistant
- Aluminum frame: corrosion-resistant, robust for roof mounting
- EPDM gasket seal: long-life weather sealing
- Mineral wool insulation: back-of-collector insulation reduces heat loss to ambient
Mounting and orientation
Optimal collector orientation for solar water heating in the continental US:
- Azimuth: due south (within ±30 degrees acceptable)
- Tilt angle: latitude angle (e.g., 35° in San Francisco, 40° in Denver)
- Mounting structures: roof rack, ground rack, or pole mounts depending on site
- Shading: verify no shading during midday sun hours (10 AM – 4 PM)
Heliodyne provides detailed mounting hardware for various roof types (shingle, tile, standing seam metal). Professional installation strongly recommended for roof mounting — improper flashing causes leaks.
Pairing with Heliodyne tanks and controllers
Gobi collectors pair with Heliodyne solar storage tanks and differential controllers in complete Helio-Pack systems. Compatible with other brand solar storage tanks (Vaughn SS, SunEarth solar tanks) if controller and pump sizing are matched.
Performance expectations
A typical residential solar DHW system (two Gobi 410 collectors + 80-gallon solar storage tank) provides 60–80% of annual residential hot water needs in good solar locations (Arizona, southern California). Northern climates (Pacific Northwest, New England) achieve 40–60% solar fraction depending on installation specifics and weather patterns.
Glycol system maintenance
Closed-loop Gobi installations use propylene glycol antifreeze in the collector loop. Glycol degrades over time (typically 5–8 years), losing freeze-protection capability and developing acidic byproducts that can corrode pipes. Schedule glycol replacement every 5 years; verify glycol concentration and pH at least annually.
Lifespan
Gobi collectors carry 10-year manufacturer warranty and typically last 20–30+ years in service with proper maintenance. The most common failure mode is gasket degradation (causing water entry into the collector housing) at year 15–20; gasket replacement is possible but often coincides with whole-system upgrade decision.
Heliodyne Gobi vs SunEarth Empire
Both are credible US solar thermal collectors at the same price point and warranty terms. Heliodyne Gobi has a slight edge in absorber-plate efficiency; SunEarth Empire has slightly broader US distribution. Choose by local installer preference and dealer availability — these are commodity products at the residential solar thermal tier.