Fun with physics:
I saw a post here not too long ago, describing a way to cool the air in a duct line. I thought it was a good start, but doesn't fully bring out the potential of the design.
It was described as simply pulling the air off some ice and water in a Styrofoam cooler, into your duct line.
Here's something better, but requires a little bit more effort;
I used this design last summer to help cool down my herp room, as all the uvb lights, basking lights, heat strips, and computer equipment tend to make this rooms temps hoover around 110F. When I ran this it would cool the room down to a livable 85, and its not even a fully completed unit.
The keys to this design are heat transferability, and the basic properties of water and ice.
Things needed for an open room unit:
1) Fan
2) Styrofoam cooler
3) Copper tubing (fairly expensive) any size from 1/4 up.
4) Zip ties or small pieces of wire
5) Pump (I used a little 75gph fountain pump)
6) Some vinyl tube and either adapters or some ingenuity to connect pump to copper
7) Water
Ice
9) Salt
Tools needed:
1) Knife
2) Pliers
3) Tape (I used electrical, but that's cuz I get heaps from work)
Now to step one:
Cut three holes in the top of your cooler; one for power line in, one for feed tube out, one for drain tube in.
Place your pump in the bottom of the cooler and feed your tube through the lid and into the pump. Make sure you leave enough tube sticking out to either reach your fan, or to reach where your going to adapt into copper.
Step two:
Is the most time consuming step; Take your copper wire and begin attaching it to the FRONT of your fan. To the grate now, not the blades. A spiral pattern works best, but it really doesn't matter. Just remember that the copper tube is going to be transferring the coldness of the water into the moving air, so you want as much air passing by the copper as possible. Use your zip ties or small pieces of wire to hold the copper in place. In my pics you can see that my fan has both the feed and the drain on the same side. Makes it much easier to move water that way.
I used 1/4 inch tubing, which worked well, but caused a whole lotta friction on my pump. By the time the water made a whole circuit, it was barely a trickle out the drain, so this year I plan to use 1/2 copper. Harder to bend, but a propane torch will help me there.
Step three:
Attach your fan to your cooler; I tried to use a dresser that would adapt from copper to rubber, but it leaked, so I ended up using a crimp and a WHOLE LOTTA TAPE. However you manage to do this, remember; DRIPPING SALT WATER ONTO A CARPET WILL LEAVE A STRANGE STAIN.
now, the construction is finished. Fill your cooler about 1/4 full. I only fill it this much initially because when the ice runs out I just dump more in. Three times then I have to dump the cooler somewhere.
After putting the water in, add Ice. The more the better I say, but you want it to float still. If you add so much Ice that its grater then the water content... well... the pump has issues working in that environment.
Take your hand and stir those cubes around. I say to use your hand, because I want all you ppl who ditched science class to learn something. The water should get cold enough to make your skin tingle, and be slightly unpleasant to touch.
Now, add SALT. Any salt works! I have buckets of side-walk de-icier that I use. Course I make sure there isn't any funky chemicals in it. There's probably some mathematical ratio of salt to water we're supposed to use, but math requires brain cells that I've since fried. Or I'm just lazy... who cares! Add enough that it tastes salty I guess.... then add a little more...
NOW, stir that sucker up with your hand. Notice how its now VERY unpleasant to touch? The water is now MUCH colder as salt LOWERS the freezing point of water. So that means it takes colder water to make ice. So that Ice is now melting, but its melting in water that's colder than before. Make sense? SURE!
Flip on your pump and check for leaks. Make sure the water flows well through the tubing. You'll start to see frost develop on the copper. Time to turn on the fan.
I've found that lower speeds actually cool better than faster settings, as the act of molecules moving actually generates heat. More movement=more friction=more heat.
Feel the breeze.
njoy!
PICS:
I saw a post here not too long ago, describing a way to cool the air in a duct line. I thought it was a good start, but doesn't fully bring out the potential of the design.
It was described as simply pulling the air off some ice and water in a Styrofoam cooler, into your duct line.
Here's something better, but requires a little bit more effort;
I used this design last summer to help cool down my herp room, as all the uvb lights, basking lights, heat strips, and computer equipment tend to make this rooms temps hoover around 110F. When I ran this it would cool the room down to a livable 85, and its not even a fully completed unit.
The keys to this design are heat transferability, and the basic properties of water and ice.
Things needed for an open room unit:
1) Fan
2) Styrofoam cooler
3) Copper tubing (fairly expensive) any size from 1/4 up.
4) Zip ties or small pieces of wire
5) Pump (I used a little 75gph fountain pump)
6) Some vinyl tube and either adapters or some ingenuity to connect pump to copper
7) Water
Ice
9) Salt
Tools needed:
1) Knife
2) Pliers
3) Tape (I used electrical, but that's cuz I get heaps from work)
Now to step one:
Cut three holes in the top of your cooler; one for power line in, one for feed tube out, one for drain tube in.
Place your pump in the bottom of the cooler and feed your tube through the lid and into the pump. Make sure you leave enough tube sticking out to either reach your fan, or to reach where your going to adapt into copper.
Step two:
Is the most time consuming step; Take your copper wire and begin attaching it to the FRONT of your fan. To the grate now, not the blades. A spiral pattern works best, but it really doesn't matter. Just remember that the copper tube is going to be transferring the coldness of the water into the moving air, so you want as much air passing by the copper as possible. Use your zip ties or small pieces of wire to hold the copper in place. In my pics you can see that my fan has both the feed and the drain on the same side. Makes it much easier to move water that way.
I used 1/4 inch tubing, which worked well, but caused a whole lotta friction on my pump. By the time the water made a whole circuit, it was barely a trickle out the drain, so this year I plan to use 1/2 copper. Harder to bend, but a propane torch will help me there.
Step three:
Attach your fan to your cooler; I tried to use a dresser that would adapt from copper to rubber, but it leaked, so I ended up using a crimp and a WHOLE LOTTA TAPE. However you manage to do this, remember; DRIPPING SALT WATER ONTO A CARPET WILL LEAVE A STRANGE STAIN.
now, the construction is finished. Fill your cooler about 1/4 full. I only fill it this much initially because when the ice runs out I just dump more in. Three times then I have to dump the cooler somewhere.
After putting the water in, add Ice. The more the better I say, but you want it to float still. If you add so much Ice that its grater then the water content... well... the pump has issues working in that environment.
Take your hand and stir those cubes around. I say to use your hand, because I want all you ppl who ditched science class to learn something. The water should get cold enough to make your skin tingle, and be slightly unpleasant to touch.
Now, add SALT. Any salt works! I have buckets of side-walk de-icier that I use. Course I make sure there isn't any funky chemicals in it. There's probably some mathematical ratio of salt to water we're supposed to use, but math requires brain cells that I've since fried. Or I'm just lazy... who cares! Add enough that it tastes salty I guess.... then add a little more...
NOW, stir that sucker up with your hand. Notice how its now VERY unpleasant to touch? The water is now MUCH colder as salt LOWERS the freezing point of water. So that means it takes colder water to make ice. So that Ice is now melting, but its melting in water that's colder than before. Make sense? SURE!
Flip on your pump and check for leaks. Make sure the water flows well through the tubing. You'll start to see frost develop on the copper. Time to turn on the fan.
I've found that lower speeds actually cool better than faster settings, as the act of molecules moving actually generates heat. More movement=more friction=more heat.
Feel the breeze.
njoy!
PICS: