Great idea, nice DIY, but in the end. You will probaly create more heat from the motors, pumps fans ect... than you can actually exchange with this setup. Thermo-Dynamics are a tricky business. Most small scale units such as this are just part of a too small thermomass space.Here is my homemade Icebox, I made it from basically a transmission oil cooler from ebay for about $35 and a HVAC vent which was about $10 at most. There are probably several ways that this could be done. The only problem with the way I did it was the trans cooler I bought takes special fittings that where hard to find. I saw some pretty good trans coolers at the local auto parts store that would work. I would not use the tube and fin kind, get the plate kind they are more efficient. The one I bought is about 5 1/2" x 11 1/2" by 2" thick and fit good in the vent. I will test how well it cools my reflector in a couple days when my new ballast arrives. It should do well it is close to being twice the size of the Icebox version. This should be run from a remote reservoir that has a chiller but I am going to use city water drain to waste because I dont pay for water where I live.
indeed it would be easy to move fresh air but if your from the shouth the air is usually dry and hot so moving that air isnt going to help cool anything. this method produced little heat compared to the amount of cooling. in my situation it braught my tent from 85-90 to 70-75 thats not bad considering i am going to run the fan regardless but all i had to do was add a chiller.Great idea, nice DIY, but in the end. You will probaly create more heat from the motors, pumps fans ect... than you can actually exchange with this setup. Thermo-Dynamics are a tricky business. Most small scale units such as this are just part of a too small thermomass space.
Like I said, nicely job and well done. Just not sure what sort of heat exchange you will see from this. Sometimes its just easier to move more fresh air.
Great idea, nice DIY, but in the end. You will probaly create more heat from the motors, pumps fans ect... than you can actually exchange with this setup. Thermo-Dynamics are a tricky business. Most small scale units such as this are just part of a too small thermomass space.
Like I said, nicely job and well done. Just not sure what sort of heat exchange you will see from this. Sometimes its just easier to move more fresh air.
Run the water right out of the chiller in to the ice box your cooling numbers triple or maybe more im not sure really.yes watercooling is great.
has the ability to remove way more heat than air (water has the ability to remove around 4 times more heat and around 20-25 times faster).
what people dont realize is that with an a/c, as soon as the area comes in contact with heat, the a/c is losing its efficiency. you get penalized for cooling wattage....where as you could be using those wasted a/c wattage on some more lighting? you know?
truth be told, around 30-35% of energy the a/c produces is able to 'cool' the rest is pretty much wasted (this is without leaks, other heating issues, etc )
for calculating equipment..... a general rule of thumb is 3.41 btu are produced for every watt. soooo a 1k watter will run about 3500 btu.
this is a general scale:
1/2hp chiller = 6k btu
1hp chiller = 12k btu
1.5 chiller = 18k btu
2hp chiller = 24k btu
last but not least your icebox can be used as your room a/c.... thas the bad ass part about it. talk about 2 birds, 1 stone!!!!!!!
I was more of asking how they got the math just didnt know how to lol.i have no idea what you are talking about.
chiller size is directed at how many btu of heat you want to remove from the room. there are about 3.41 btu per watt
you will want to get a chiller that has enough btu power to remove whatever heat your ballast and lights (btu) are giving off.
water is water, just as watercooling is watercooling. it doesnt matter if you are using it for aquariums, horticultural lighting, or overclocking of PCs... It doesnt matter what situation you are using it for, you must account for btu's. Its like choosing an a/c unit. You dont get a 6k btu window a/c for a 25x25 room. However with a powerful enough chiller that is accounted for light wattage and supplemental btu will chill that same 25x25 no problem. a 6k btu a/c would not stand a chance.
it all boils down to efficiency of water removing more heat than traditional air cooling.
"Water has a thermal conductivity of 0.6 W/ (m*K) which is much higher than the thermal conductivity of air which is only 0.03 W/(m*K)"
that is double the capacity.
this is math. this is how things work, not a guess.
radio shackgot my chiller in today but now i need to find a power supply for it , its the 4 pronged molux connection ( i think its called molux) that you would connect to your motherboard to run your cpu fan does anyone know what these are called or where i can buy one?
radio shack didnt have it i checked there first , i ended up just splicing the cablesradio shack
finished mine , parts were about 40$ and the duck tape was unnecessary but i just wanted the piece of mind that there would be no air leeks (or at least minimal) also it looks crocked in the picture but its not
Nice link thanks!this guy makes a chiller from a window air conditioner, which you can find for basically free
http://forums.techpowerup.com/showthread.php?t=15831