Homebrew Air Conditioning for Under $25
inkey string writes "Summer has arrived, and I've been busy slowly overheating in my student house without central air.
I decided to put my thermodynamics classes to work however, and produced this ~24$ homebrew air conditioner. It'll cool a room to a comfortable level in 15-20 mins, and will run for a few hours on a garbage pail full of water.
It's cheap, environmentally friendly (just fire the waste water off to your garden), and makes a good one hour project for a quiet evening."
I hope his server isn't in his room, because all the thermodynamics courses in the world wont teach you about slashdotting.
Move to San Francisco.
Today it hit 70F, and the news stations are talking about "the heatwave of 2005".
Just great, assuming you have an infinite supply of free ice water. Add teh cost of the ice machine, and it costs a bit more than $24.
Next up, a $24 watercooling rig for his web server.
c 29e9dd8f982b3da/index.html
http://www.mirrordot.org/stories/5cb66a4a72a5269b
This
http://www.eng.uwaterloo.ca.nyud.net:8090/~gmilbur n/ac/
Will someone edit the submission to replace the URL, please? Sheesh.
But sadly this isnt that revolutionary, nor is it very 'green'. It takes a cold source of water to work, and if you have none in your area (tap water wont cut it unless you happen to get fed from a pipe running through a glacier) you have to get cold media from your local refridgerator/freezer. Why not instead rig a direct cycle through your cooling appliance of choice to offer a small, localized cooling effect? It also wouldn't waste water. Just remember, don't try to cool the room with the freezer in it.
Dude, you're in Canada. Open the window.
Now you just have to figure out how to keep the snow off of the carpet.
Unless you have a solar or wind-powered refrigerator, I suspect that the overall system is not actually all that environmentally friendly. What is the energy efficiency of the system?
The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
A swamp cooler pulls the air through the actual water. It uses evaporation for the cooling effect. That's rather different than this, which is just a crude radiator. effect.
By placing the garbage pail full of water in your garden, you ensure that within five minutes of the link going live on Slashdot, you'll have several gallons of piping-hot vegetable soup!
I think that his garbage can full of ice water should at least have a few cold beers. I mean really, he's in college!
It didn't seem all that likely that most /.ers would care about evaporative cooling, since even in Arizona they only work part of the year (like now, although today the Phoenix dew point got up to 10C. I woke up just knowing it had gone up because the cooler was blowing full speed and it still wasn't all that cool.) Never mind next month when the monsoons start. AC time then for sure.
Lacking <sarcasm> tags,
Thank you mirrordot.
Wait... this retard thinks that using his fridge, inside his house, to produce ice... then cooling with the ice... is going to make his house cooler? He could accomplish the exact same thing by just opening his freezer door, right? I hope this kid's Thermo professor sees this and kicks him out of school.
#1 you can buy a bag of ice at the gas station/convenience store, not free but then neither is the electricity to run your freezer.
#2 even if you used the house freezer, you shut the door and basically you're pumping heat away from the bedroom into the kitchen, obviously you won't get huge temperature differentials, but 5-6C feels very noticeable when you're trying to fall asleep and it's too hot to do so.
-- the cake is a lie
Other than the obvious ingenuity involved in the creation of this device, the reason things like this don't exist in the real world is that they're hardly efficient. And comparing the purchase price instead of the operating costs of such a device is a sure sign you're missing something.
Air conditioners are unbelievably cheap and unbelievably efficient nowadays.
As others have said, this setup has all sorts of problems, from a reliance upon a source of ice that may very well be dumping more heat into the local environment than it saves, to wasting water.
Though this system doesn't use a pump, a recirculating system with a small electric pump could end up creating more heat than it saves.
If you're really bent upon saving energy in a cost-effective fashion, adding insulation is almost always efficient. Good blinds on the windows are also a great investment.
"I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
number one, yes i realise that in a closed system freezing ice to cool yourself off is foolish. this is why i make ice in the kitchen, and cool my room off at night.
which addresses the why no recirculation/you need an infinite supply of ice criticisms. this was designed to cool me off before bed, so i could fall asleep without wanting to kill myself. once the bucket runs out of water/ice, it just becomes a regular fan which is fine once the house cools off in the wee hours. plus i dont have to worry about knocking anything over in a morning daze.
ive rigged it up to a slowly flowing garden hose which will keep things cool indefinitely, but i find it easier and a bit cooler to just pick up a big bag of ice and dump it in when it gets really hot.
anyways, take it or leave it. and to the graduating chemmie that said he was ashamed to call me a student - come visit me at my office by the weef lab (e2-1311), im sure i can address any of your concerns to my satisfaction.
Spend another $26, and buy a real airconditioner for $50 at CostCo.
It's $99.99 with an instant $50 off rebate at the register.
Less work too.....
I don't know if this guy ever took shop class, but the simple old trick of filling the part of the copper tubing to be bent with sand will help prevent it from collapsing from a too-tight bend.
...to cool a room, as has been noted repeatedly, a few refinements that can be done easily and cheaply:
:)
1) Get a second trash can. Drain to trash can number 2. This will allow you to save water, plus:
2) Put salt in the water. The ice and chilled water mixture gets colder with salt.
You probably don't want to drain salt water to the yard.
You can run from one trash can to the other, then when it's done draining, swap one can for the other and ice down the other can. If you've got some freezer space to dedicate to the project, the bottles of ice are probably an excellent idea-- have a set in the freezer and one in the heat pump.