Thanks so much for the reply and offer to help. I'll answer your questions real quick here then go into more detail on some stuff I came across last night that I think will work but I definitely still need a little help understanding it.
-------No, This is on a timer and will run a full 12hr straight. I have it plumbed to natural gas and its very cheap here so not worried about a straight 12 run. Plus with it outside so there should be no chance of extra Co2 build up anywhere
------- As cheap as possible, I think I may have found a solution last night but definitly still need a little help understanding exactly how to wire, and probably more importantly why and how it works. I'm really trying to wrap my melon around all this but not making alot of sense at the moment.
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-------I'll post a couple pics below of my ventilation and inlet for Co2 but I'll try to sum up what I have now and my plan as soon as this run is done. So at the moment I'm relying on mass air exchange @ roughly 3 times per minute in a 7'x8'x8' room been running like this for a long time but after seeing a buddys results in a new room he just built with the exact same strain I'm switching to Co2 (amazing). Once the current girls are done I plan on running the lights in a closed ventilation circuit (Closed from the room but constant fresh air) using a 8" vortex. I recently purchased a 6" vortex that will be used to extract room air at set temp or timed intervals what ever comes first once I move to a sealed vent for the lights. And as far as pressurizing the room a dont think it will be a problem as I will not have any kind of dampers on the room ventilation. So when the Co2 fan kicks in it should naturally push air out the pre filter (shown Below) into the exhaust.
--------------------------------------------------------Co2 Inlet------------------------------------------------------------------
Exhaust (pre filter shown then runs to inline carbon then out a roof vent)
-------Agree, have any suggestions by chance, I've been looking at radio shack ac/dc adapter to run the Co2 monitor and
Something like this to power the fan . Am I correct in thinking that its ok to give the fan more than what its power rating is? It seems like that type fan would only draw as much as needed, but again I dont know electricity at all. With what I'm think about now I need two power supply's one for the Co2 monitor and one for the inline fan. And to be honest I'm still unsure about that fan it might actually be a bit to powerful, might suck to much air vs co2.
Ok so last night I got to thinking about the piggyback plug on the cap-ppm3. Basically if I could add the same but diy piggyback to mine, what I would do is plug the piggyback into a timer to only allow the fan to work with the Co2 monitor while the lights are on. So I would plug the telaire into its own power supply then plug the piggyback cord into a timer then into 110 supply and plug the fan into the pigtail off that same cord. I came across a diy thread for the piggyback cord on another site but I really still dont understand it. I'll post it below, What I think is going on is the relay on the monitor hooks into the neutral of the piggy back to complete a circuit, so there's no current going to the monitor the power for what ever you plug in comes from the 110 male and the monitor is just used to complete the circuit neutral or common, unsure. As I'm sure you can tell I have no idea what I'm talking about but I'm trying to learn and with some help and maybe explanation I think this should work fine. It would only be for powering the fan at full power so on/off and thats why I may need to play with fan sizes to get a good concentration of co2 coming through the supply line. Anyway if you could help put this stuff below in real basic laymen terms, man I sure would apprecaiate it.
Thanks again
From another site