Do they make an AC for grow tents?

420magic

Member
I am new to growing. I have only done a couple grows. Both foxtailed. It could have been from the genetics, but judging by the leaf burns i'm pretty sure it was the temperature stressing it. I know AC infinity makes it heater but I can't find where any manufacturer makes an air conditioner. What is the best way to lower the temperature in your grow tent? I can set the inline fan correctly and that helps a little but then it drops the humidity significantly. I'm currently growing in a 2x2 tent with a TS1000 But about to start two plants in a 2x4 daisy chaining 2 TS1000's together. Thanks in advance.
 

Tracker

Well-Known Member
Where is your grow tent set up? Is it in an enclosed space? Does it exchange air with the enclosed space? Describe your intake/exhaust situation.
 

420magic

Member
Using an six inch ac infinity inline fan. The 2x2 is in my bedroom with plenty of space. I have the six inch oscillating fan in the tent and keep the tent opened with a fan on low on the outside of the tent blowing inside. I've found this reduces the temperature 3-5 degrees which is ok while I'm in flowering and need the lower humidity. The problem is the leaves got burnt during veg phase and this method drops the humidity too low.
 

Blue brother

Well-Known Member
A decent option is to get a small tent and a portable ac, run the portable ac in the small tent and have a duct connecting this tent and your passive intake on your grow tent, then run the portable ac exhaust out the tent and to the same place your grow tent exhausts to, this will cool the incoming air before it gets to your grow tent without making your bedroom too cold. There are a lot more efficient options but most include a mini split or window unit and your grow tent probably isn't big enough to warrant this, another option is to upgrade your extraction.
Just making sure... you are exhausting the grow air away from the air mass that is your intake air aren't you? If not you're just moving heat around and never actually getting rid of it so it will build up
 

420magic

Member
A decent option is to get a small tent and a portable ac, run the portable ac in the small tent and have a duct connecting this tent and your passive intake on your grow tent, then run the portable ac exhaust out the tent and to the same place your grow tent exhausts to, this will cool the incoming air before it gets to your grow tent without making your bedroom too cold. There are a lot more efficient options but most include a mini split or window unit and your grow tent probably isn't big enough to warrant this, another option is to upgrade your extraction.
Just making sure... you are exhausting the grow air away from the air mass that is your intake air aren't you? If not you're just moving heat around and never actually getting rid of it so it will build up
That is a great idea. I already have an a c infinity 24inx36 in tent. That would work great for this I think. I don't understand your last question can u clarify? Here is a pic of my current setup.
 

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Blue brother

Well-Known Member
That is a great idea. I already have an a c infinity 24inx36 in tent. That would work great for this I think. I don't understand your last question can u clarify? Here is a pic of my current setup.
Yeah sorry about the way I wonded the question, I was abit festive at the time of writing. Soooo, I can see that you're exhausting the air out of your tent into the same space that you're drawing air in from, this means the heat has nowhere to go, so you're inadvertently warming up your intake air with your exhaust air. In an ideal world your exhaust should run to a seperate area, like the loft or basement, or out a window or hole in the wall. Keeping your intake air and exhaust air totally seperate is key to maintaining the environment within your tent.

hope this helps, let me know if you understand or not and I can help talk you through it
 

Jjgrow420

Well-Known Member
That is a great idea. I already have an a c infinity 24inx36 in tent. That would work great for this I think. I don't understand your last question can u clarify? Here is a pic of my current setup.
Are you using the fan/filter to draw air out or push air in? If it's to draw air out you have it backwards. You can run it that way but it's better to have the filter in the tent, ducting out then the fan for efficiency.
 

medidedicated

Well-Known Member
Sorry but a ts1000 isn't going to create enough heat to burn a plant. Sounds like you have something else going on. Pics help.
Buying an AC unit to cool a 2x2 is absurd in many different ways
Oh yes they do lol. The hottest lights I ever had before was just aftermarkets and soon as I got these oof. Just two of them in a 2.5x5 spiked a 100 square ft room to where I drilled holes in the door to exaust outside. That was a bad idea.

A smaller tent would absolutely cook up if the room temp is a good 80F 85F which the lights a lone can do. Coupled with a dehuey if no ac yup OPs situation checks out.
 

Jjgrow420

Well-Known Member
Oh yes they do lol. The hottest lights I ever had before was just aftermarkets and soon as I got these oof. Just two of them in a 2.5x5 spiked a 100 square ft room to where I drilled holes in the door to exaust outside. That was a bad idea.

A smaller tent would absolutely cook up if the room temp is a good 80F 85F which the lights a lone can do. Coupled with a dehuey if no ac yup OPs situation checks out.
Who keeps their house at 80-85? My thermostat is set at 63 in the winter and 70 in the summer. There's alot of unanswered questions in here and I just don't think an ac is the answer to cool a 2x2. Nobody else sees that that is insane? You'd be paying 100x the amount of power to cool then the entire grow takes. It's completely unnecessary.
 

Jjgrow420

Well-Known Member
You could run the extraction fan on a repeat cycle timer, or a controller for heat or humidity where it will turn on/off at a set temp or humidity. Buying an AC unit for a 2x2 with a 100 watt led is beyond absurd. I can't even believe that someone could suggest that as an option. But hey what do I know I guess.
 

medidedicated

Well-Known Member
Idk if youve grown in a 2x2 a lot of people go straight to large spaces but they heat up to an easy 80-85 even with a room sitting at say, 70-75F. Even my after market ran hot in the 2x2 and its not as much watts or heat output like a ts1000. Those are just as bad as my viparks3000 on 25-50%.

My temps I swore used to be 65 summer 75 winter but that changed with roomies. Now its 65F winter 75F summer. We got a new ac system but it never worked like it used to and cant get below 75F.

When the home ac is off or no winter air to cool, its an easy 80-85F and climbing but only so many hrs in a day.. Then its lights out time and sunset so its cooling but is just always warm. Those are the times I may need to install a mini split. Mind you the room is 100 square ft idk about OPs.

Dehuey is just as bad if OP ever runs into needing one. I had foxtails before in a 2x2. Maybe grow smaller plants and keep light on 50% like Im doing now as plants are smaller to avoid mold. Would help in these situations if its seasonal. Any heat output just accumilates.

I can cool the room immediately pointing a pedestal fan into the room. Not the other way around. Just need to push cool air into the hot room. Even then if your grow is too big youll suffer without mini split. Im just enjoying winter totally forgetting the inferno thats coming.
 

medidedicated

Well-Known Member
Its when theres no ac in say, transition to spring or fall. Thats a good half of the year Im suffering. If your room has no ac then its even worse but just open door and point 2300cfm pedestal fan into the room. Just leave it that way. Otherwise my home ac will get temps down to borderline high but better.

My whole setup changed though but it still will get hot. The dehuey and lights just steadily throw out heat. Exausting outside will heat up the whole home a few degrees or more. Its a process that takes days to cool or warm if you play around with exausting outside. The hvac people were pissed.

They asked for few days at a time to monitor progress. Its a finicky job they said they read a book 5” thick just to be hvac. They were right at end of day the home ac did get better. So with a grain of salt thats what happened to me if youre considering venting outside. It will work for the grow but impact home ac.
 

Drop That Sound

Well-Known Member
If you get a small 30 pint dehumidifier, you can turn it into a baby DIY mini split. Perfect size for a small 2x2 sealed tent in a room setup. You'll also need to supplement co2, so expect to get a regulator and bottle.

Preferably get a free or cheap used dehuey that is passed the warranty, because you'll be voiding it when you take it apart to modify the coil. Basically, you just take the front housing or plastic case off the dehuey, and carefully bend the evaporator coil out and away, without cracking or kinking the small copper lines and releasing all the freon into the air. If that happens you SOL, and need another unit.

Then simply cut a slit in the tent wall, and stuff the coil through it, and seal it back up around the copper tubes. Its literally that easy, as long as you are somewhat handy, or good at ghetto rigging or tearing apart shit at least. People still do it all the time to make affordable DIY glycol chillers, but in your case you would use it like a compact mini split unit instead. You just poke the coil in the tent, instead of plunging it into a cooler with glycol or a res...

You can also use a window AC the same way, but you don't need that many btus and it will be bulkier sitting next to the tent. Dehueys are more compact and easier to do the mod anyway..

Its the only way I can see that would be worth using HVAC to cool a small tent, without wasting loads of power and trying to condition the whole room.


 

420magic

Member
Yeah sorry about the way I wonded the question, I was abit festive at the time of writing. Soooo, I can see that you're exhausting the air out of your tent into the same space that you're drawing air in from, this means the heat has nowhere to go, so you're inadvertently warming up your intake air with your exhaust air. In an ideal world your exhaust should run to a seperate area, like the loft or basement, or out a window or hole in the wall. Keeping your intake air and exhaust air totally seperate is key to maintaining the environment within your tent.

hope this helps, let me know if you understand or not and I can help talk you through it
That makes perfect sense. Thanks for the clarification. I rent so don't think I can do any of those options
 

420magic

Member
Are you using the fan/filter to draw air out or push air in? If it's to draw air out you have it backwards. You can run it that way but it's better to have the filter in the tent, ducting out then the fan for efficiency.
Wouldn't that just make the tent room temperature? I put it everything on the outside because I wanted to utilize my space as much as possible. My tent isn't very tall it's a mars hydro 2x2.
 
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