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by Vyger
i
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supply unless its from a cold source. Also you need to have enough ground to water so
you don't water log your garden and lawn. It will probably work best in rural areas.
With the fan turned off and the water running outside the temp of my copper pipe is 48F
(Infrared non contact thermometer reading)
step 2materials
For my heat exchanger I used copper pipe with aluminum fins. This is the same stuff
that is used for hot water baseboard heating systems. I got mine a long time ago so I
don't know if the same stuff is still around but there should be something similar on the
market.
In addition I got mine for free. I found it in a pile at the local landfill apparently
discarded by a contractor as scraps from a heating job. (I used to get all my firewood at
the landfill from trees people in town cut down, that has all since changed with all the
new laws. Now I am not allowed to remove wood from the landfill, instead they bury it,
go figure.)
I doubt that they throw anything like this away today with recycle prices so high but
you should check with a local contractor to see if he has anything. He probably would
rather sell it to you cheap instead of hassling with recycling it. If you can't get scraps
then you will need to by new.
To fit a standard box fan the sections need to be about 21 inches long. Stacked one on
top of the other it took 7 pieces to reach the top of the fan. This will vary if your fins are
smaller.
You will also need elbows to connect the sections together and lots of little pipe pieces.
Scrap works great here too rather than cutting up a full length of pipe.
Originally I started with one layer of pipe but after seeing how good it worked I added 2
more so mine has 3 layers of heat fins. This seams to be a good number. Anymore and it
would get difficult to move around and would take up to much room. Any less and the
air doesn't get enough contact to cool down enough. Finish the ends with fittings that
can connect to a hose. You can use the special connecting hoses for washing machines
but I just cut up sections from a regular garden hose. The bigger the diameter of the
hose the better, you will restrict the water flow to the outside if you use small hoses and
pipes. All of this hardware is available at any local hardware store. Shop around for the
best prices. I used 42 elbows to put mine together.
step 3Tools
Not much is need in the way of tools. A pipe cutter is essential, Measuring tape and
marker, Flux and solid core solder and rags to wipe off the pipes. The pliers are for
holding the pipe as you solder, the sections are short so the whole thing gets really hot.
You should also have some fine sandpaper or emery cloth to sand the fittings. It helps
the solder to hold better. If you haven't done soldering before this will be great practice.
because at the time that is what I had and it worked good. Today I would probably use
nylon wire ties along with the twine. Just zip it all together. Whatever you use make
sure that its tightly pulled together so the joints aren't stressed. It helps too to add some
kind of handle so you can pick it up easily.
Notice in the picture the hose connector on the bottom and the long pipe to change from
the top to the bottom.
One step I forgot to mention, PRESSURE TEST IT for leaks outside before you bring
it into the house. Run water through it until all the air is out and then leave it sit under
pressure and check for any wet spots.
are faster to turn on and off. I may swap out the ones I have now to ball valves in the
future.
will probably end up leaking. And there goes your fountain again.
Fourth - Radiators are going to be difficult to get clean. Most of them are full of bug
leftovers and oil and other assorted things from the engine compartment. Even if you do
get them clean they will probably continue to put off a nasty smell.
Fifth - The ability to use the outside water in a normal way, and by this I mean that you
can turn off the water at the hose, run sprinklers or even wash your car without any fear
of fountains in the living room, is something you probably could not achieve using
radiators. With my cooler there is no need to just let the hose drain on the ground
because it can be pressurized - it is not just a drain. In addition because it is made to
hold the water pressure and not leak you can locate the cooler anywhere in the house
where you need the cooling. I actually considered building a unit to fit into the heat
ducts and use the furnace fan to drive the air through it so that it would become a whole
house unit, but I decided that it was too much work and too complicated for my needs.
Keep it simple and you will have fewer problems.
If you are planning on using this for your garage or shop I could see using radiators.
Water spills wouldn't be near the problem that they would be inside your house but I
would not recommend using radiators for in-house use.
Next - If you mount one in a window and pull in air from outside you will defeat part of
the cooling effect. The outside air is far warmer and has much more heat in it than the
inside air. By setting this up completely inside and circulating the air inside through it
you get more cooling because the air going through it is already more moderate. Use
outside air only if you need the ventilation.
{{{
What would be really great is for some enterprising company to manufacture a specific
unit for this purpose. A heat exchanger/radiator that is designed for the standard water
pressure built into a plastic housing for catching the condensation and with a fan
mounted inside. An all in one unit. Just attach the hoses and plug the fan in. But it's
unlikely that anyone will because the market is not large enough. Of course, that being
said, some Chinese company will probably market this in the future and totally screw
me out of any share of the profits.
}}}
I did a Google search on the internet and there is baseboard heating pipe available, even
some for salvage prices. Somebody in Texas had 200 feet that he had just taken out and
didn't want to throw away because it was in like new shape. My cooler used
about 40 feet of the pipe. So that's around the amount that you will need to make a
similar unit.
The water I use is directly from my pressure tank. It's untreated and is intended for
outside watering. Our ground water here is pretty nasty. It's very alkali and has lots of
rust in it. Just to be able to use it for the house I run it through a sediment filter, then a
rust filter and finally a water softener which uses rust removing salt. And after all of that
we still don't drink it. So the inside water and outside water are kept completely
separate.
I want to emphasize this ---- I don't waste the water by just dumping it on the ground.
It is used for watering the garden, grass and trees. It hasn't rained here for 8 weeks now.
With temperatures in the 80's and above everything dies if it's not watered. So the water
is not being wasted. I try to keep a band of green around the house as a fire preventative.
In 1999 we had a grass fire / fire storm sweep through the area and 3 neighbors houses
burnt to the ground along with 4 out buildings/garages and the UPS shipping depot.
Only the houses with green grass around them were spared. So having a green belt is a
pretty good idea. So again I emphasize, I would be watering anyway, I am just taking
advantage of something that would normally be thrown away. (The cooling properties
of the water). Also this doesn't need tremendous amounts of water to work. Even at a
trickle there is still a lot of heat absorbed by the water.
"bricko" described this as a poor mans water source heat pump". He is pretty
correct in that. Regular heat pumps don't work here because the winter air temperatures
are too low, as much as 40 bellow zero and often 10 below for weeks at a time. So they
developed what are called ground source heat pumps that both heat and cool using the
ground for the moderate temperatures that a heat pump needs. My cooler is actually
only half a system in that it's not for heating, but for cooling only. A full Ground Source
Heat Pump system is very expensive and uses a lot of power year round. In addition the
laws concerning them have changed recently. In Montana you are no longer allowed to
return water back to the water table by using a well. There were too many instances of
people contaminating the water table by returning dirty water to a well. So any new heat
pump system has to be contained or sealed. You can run a fluid through underground
heat exchangers but the inside fluid cannot come into direct contact with the ground
water, thus it's a sealed loop system. I have avoided all of this by simply using the water
for both watering plants and cooling the house. It's not sophisticated, there's no
compressor, no thermostat, it's manually regulated, this is what makes it cheap and
green. This is also in keeping with the whole concept of the going green contest. Yes
there are more sophisticated systems available. But that's not the intent of the contest, at
least as I understand it. (Or so I thought until I saw the contest results)
I do have a plan for a wind powered/compressed air/water pump that I would love to
adapt to this system and make a totally self contained system. But I have never had the
funds to develop it or the kind of shop tools I would need to build it. Maybe
someday----.
Finally for those of you who have asked, I run the coldest water through the outermost
layer so the air to leave hits the coldest water as it departs. The temperature drop
between the incoming and outgoing water depends on the flow rate. Running full open
the water temp only drops a few degrees. But running only one sprinkler and so
reducing the flow, the temp difference can be as much as 15 degrees. The inlet hose will
be wet with condensation but the out hose will be completely dry. Interestingly the fan
speed doesn't appear to have to much affect on the difference in the water temp, but it
does have an effect on the air temp. The lower the fan speed the colder the air coming
out of the cooler. That's because the air spends a little longer moving over the fins and
gets a chance to shed more heat. However the cold air doesn't circulate around as much
because there isn't much air movement, so I usually run the fan on high or medium.
Also in case anyone is wondering or interested, my well is around 70 feet deep with a
submersible pump at the bottom and a pitiless connector about 10 feet down. Because
our ground freezes down to 8 feet on occasions all underground pipes need to be at least
that deep if not deeper to prevent them from freezing. So this is a sealed well, the top of
the casing is closed to prevent any contamination from getting into it. Our water table is
around 20 feet down so the pump is well below the table. This allows for it to draw
down a lot before it starts sucking air.