demarko
Well-Known Member
Yes sir I believe the muffler is one problem as you stated and I also thought about using a booster fan to assist pushing all that air threw. I installed the dampers it help keep the air from flowing into each other and now I can actually run both fine. I think I will try reordering things and maybe removing my muffler. I’m considerate and I figured I’ll use the muffler to keep noise down a bit from all that wind noise.I grow in a 4x4 with an HID. I run a 600 in a sealed hood. I also have an Active Air 6" fan. Filter-fan-hood-exhaust with passive intake and no muffler. This is in a garage that doesn't have AC so I shut down for the summer because of the heat. The rest of the 9 months of the year everything is fine and I actually run a small heater in the tent in the middle of the winter during the day when the lights are off. I don't have any clip on fans or anything in the tent as the air coming in from the passive intakes at the bottom of the tent create plenty of airflow with the suction from the fan at the top of the tent. Clip on or tower fans inside the tent don't cool anything down they just move the air around.
With that portable air conditioner you do not want to extend the hose it came with as it will create back pressure and cause the unit to quit functioning. I've heard of people using a booster fan if they extend the length of the exhaust hose but I've never done that so I don't know how effective that is.
Do you need the muffler? It may be reducing the flow for the exhaust. I've never used one so I don't really know how much restriction it could cause. I would try changing the order of the components to filter-fan-hood-exhaust pushing the air instead of sucking the air through the hood and remove the muffler. If you use a speed controller you can turn the fan down to where you can't hardly hear it. I would use passive intake rather than leaving the door open. I have two 4" and one 6" vents opened and filtered.
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