Home made AC unit?

Onlyoneman

Well-Known Member
I had this idea that I think might work, but I don't really have $60 to blow right now, so hopefully I can convince someone else that my idea is as good as I think it is so they will try it out for me hahaha.

It is a simple idea but I think it will be harder to explain.

I think all you would need is a fan, a small sub. pump, a cooler and some coper tubing.
A few feet of vynle tubing, and some zip ties as well.
How much vynle tubing depends on how close you can get your cooler to your fan when its all set up.

-The 1/4'' coper tubing is wrapped in to a coil to cover either one or two sides of your fan. The zipties are used to fix it in place every few inches or so.
-The vynle tubing is cut to length: 1 piece from one end of the coper tubing to the sub. pump, and the other from the other open end of the coper tube to a hole in the top of the cooler.
-The cooler is then filled with enough water to cover the pump, and filled the rest of the way with ice. (you may, depending on the type of intake, have to devise something to keep the ice clear in a small spot or something for the intake on the pump)

It should be as simple as that. When you turn on the pump ice water pumps through a coper coil which cools the air, either as it is entering the fan, or when its leaving it, or both. I am thinking it will condensate, but you can just hang the fan with the motor at the top ;) that way it won't drip, and short out the motor or something. If you could contain the condensation, then this would effectively work as a dehumidifier as well. I personally have a spot where I can safely allow the water to drip on the floor, so I don't have to worry about that. It should just evaporate again...I'll cross that bridge when I get there.

I had the idea while trying to come up with ways to not have to vent a room so often without spending $500 bucks on a big ass AC unit that I have to exhaust to the outside. The whole problem is that I want a sealed room, nothing coming in, nothing going out till night time, so that wouldn't even work. I want to be able to keep CO2 at a constant level the entire time lights are on, and only vent at night while everything is off and the plants are sleeping.

Do I even need to vent a cool, CO2 rich room?
I was thinking of using about a 15'' box fan that I saw at lowes for $15. I imagine that would cool a couple hundred square feet pretty well, and all you would have to do is change the ice and drain some water now and again.

Kind of an after thought...If I use a box fan I will only be able to fix coper tube to the front, becaue the motor is inside, not mounted on the back like I was thinking of with a floor fan or something like that. The water from the back would drip inside to the motor...or more likely be blown in to the motor.
 

cacamal

Well-Known Member
there is more to an ac unit than blowing tubes of ice water around with that said give it a shot
 

Onlyoneman

Well-Known Member
I know how an AC unit works. Thats how I know I can't use one.
I also know that cold air blown over a cold coil should drop ambient temperatures in a closed space.

Is there something in the water here at Roll it up forums? People seem to have this disease where they can't help posting useless crap...
 

cacamal

Well-Known Member
that is a sweet reply. if you know how an ac unit works then you will know that compressed...forget it if you know how an ac works why did you post some ardtard idea about blowing air over cold water around a closed space? if you have access to unlimited ice cold water to circulate through your tubes try it and give us a journal on it
 

ylem

Well-Known Member
a few problems. sorry to be a dick. the heat of the room would heat the water quickly so either you'd have to have the reservoir power cooled or constantly change the ice and cold water. ice water isn't cold enough to cool air fast enough, especially through vinyl tubing. AC units run on freon. if you could run freon through tubes in front of a fan it might work. chlorofluorocarbon is quite cold. it's pretty nasty shit and hard to contain which is why AC units are expensive. if there was a cheap easy way to cool large areas, somebody'd be all over it. sadly, heat is invasive.
 

havana

Member
actualy its a good idea, you will prob. be suprised at the results. ice would prob. last a day, and condensation the only down side. circulate water slowly.
 

fishwhistle

Active Member
I had this idea that I think might work, but I don't really have $60 to blow right now, so hopefully I can convince someone else that my idea is as good as I think it is so they will try it out for me hahaha.

It is a simple idea but I think it will be harder to explain.

I think all you would need is a fan, a small sub. pump, a cooler and some coper tubing.
A few feet of vynle tubing, and some zip ties as well.
How much vynle tubing depends on how close you can get your cooler to your fan when its all set up.

-The 1/4'' coper tubing is wrapped in to a coil to cover either one or two sides of your fan. The zipties are used to fix it in place every few inches or so.
-The vynle tubing is cut to length: 1 piece from one end of the coper tubing to the sub. pump, and the other from the other open end of the coper tube to a hole in the top of the cooler.
-The cooler is then filled with enough water to cover the pump, and filled the rest of the way with ice. (you may, depending on the type of intake, have to devise something to keep the ice clear in a small spot or something for the intake on the pump)

It should be as simple as that. When you turn on the pump ice water pumps through a coper coil which cools the air, either as it is entering the fan, or when its leaving it, or both. I am thinking it will condensate, but you can just hang the fan with the motor at the top ;) that way it won't drip, and short out the motor or something. If you could contain the condensation, then this would effectively work as a dehumidifier as well. I personally have a spot where I can safely allow the water to drip on the floor, so I don't have to worry about that. It should just evaporate again...I'll cross that bridge when I get there.

I had the idea while trying to come up with ways to not have to vent a room so often without spending $500 bucks on a big ass AC unit that I have to exhaust to the outside. The whole problem is that I want a sealed room, nothing coming in, nothing going out till night time, so that wouldn't even work. I want to be able to keep CO2 at a constant level the entire time lights are on, and only vent at night while everything is off and the plants are sleeping.

Do I even need to vent a cool, CO2 rich room?
I was thinking of using about a 15'' box fan that I saw at lowes for $15. I imagine that would cool a couple hundred square feet pretty well, and all you would have to do is change the ice and drain some water now and again.

Kind of an after thought...If I use a box fan I will only be able to fix coper tube to the front, becaue the motor is inside, not mounted on the back like I was thinking of with a floor fan or something like that. The water from the back would drip inside to the motor...or more likely be blown in to the motor.
Dude you just invented the swamp cooler!!!
 

cannabineer

Ursus marijanus
Dude you just invented the swamp cooler!!!
Not a swamp cooler ... those are evaporative. This is a closed-cycle heat exchanger into a sink charged with ice.
OP's idea could work decently provided he has access to plentiful and free ice It'll be somewhat labor-intensive to drain and recharge the heat sink cooler every few hours. cn
 

ENDLSCYCLE

Well-Known Member
This would work for sure....use google......there are all kinds of different diy ac's with pretty much the same method...this is more of a heat exchanger....I know ice will stay in a cooler full of beer in the sun all day long....with that being said just use a cooler for a res.....I'd use like the 18-24" oscillating fan with like 50' of 1/4"-3/8" copper tubing spiraled around the face, one end to the pump...other back to the cooler....just rubber tubing on each end off the fan so you could oscillate it.




^^^HA^^^
 
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