NO.Fan pulls air through filter, pushes air through air cooled hood and out of the tent....
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Ive been pushing air through my hood for multiple grows. It has never gotten hot. Ive measured every part of it with my laser thermometer- directly over the bulb it gets to a blistering 90 degrees. The rest of the hood stays under 85. I just ran it for 4 months like this.NO.
Filter -> hood -> duct -> fan, mounted outside the tent.
If you don't believe me, conduct this experiment;
Fire up your lamp inside the hood with the fan pushing air through it. Wait 20 minutes, feel the hood- be careful, the fucker will be hot!
Then, take the fan off and turn it around and remount it so it's pulling air through the same hood. Wait 20 minutes and feel the hood again. It will be cool.
You'll never push air through a hood again.
Pushing air through adds heat from the fan motor to the air. The air particles getting churned, compressed and forced through the fan also raises the temperature of the "cool air" being blown into the reflector hood. In essence, reducing the cooling capability of the air resulting in (a minor) increase in hood temperature and overall tent temperatures.I dunno, I am confused on this one, to me it just seems like CFM is CFM, either way it's lined up. Now if something was happening to mess up air flow more in one arrangement then I could see there being a performance difference. Still it seems like the reflector is gonna add it's specific turbulence either way, @ttystikk are you saying that the push setup is more turbulent because the air is coming out of the blower already turbulent and then hits the awkward box before going into the duct? I am not disputing that you noticed a difference in your real world testing, I am just trying to figure out why, whats the physics behind it. It seems like CFM would be CFM either way.
Hmm I'd like to see an IR gun reading on the blower output to prove that, I find it hard to believe that with the low wattage of the blower motor and the amount of air going through it that it wouldn't raise the air temperature more than a cunt hair. We aren't compressing the air enough to make it significantly hotter either. I just can't see it...Pushing air through adds heat from the fan motor to the air. The air particles getting churned, compressed and forced through the air also raises the temperature of the "cool air" being blown into the reflector hood.
I agree any change would be minimal.Hmm I'd like to see an IR gun reading on the blower output to prove that, I find it hard to believe that with the low wattage of the blower motor and the amount of air going through it that it wouldn't raise the air temperature more than a cunt hair. We aren't compressing the air enough to make it significantly hotter either. I just can't see it...
lol haven't we all.There's got to be something to it, or maybe @ttystikk and I both just smoked a little too much before testing.
Done that before.
Forget about it until you get some experience, is what I'd say in regards to this question.co2 supplementing?
My point exactly, the difference is minuscule. If your hood is getting to hot, there is a much bigger issue at hand.I agree any change would be minimal.
There's got to be something to it, or maybe @ttystikk and I both just smoked a little too much before testing.
Done that before.
I want measuring the remotest of the output air, I was measuring the temperature of the hood itself.Hmm I'd like to see an IR gun reading on the blower output to prove that, I find it hard to believe that with the low wattage of the blower motor and the amount of air going through it that it wouldn't raise the air temperature more than a cunt hair. We aren't compressing the air enough to make it significantly hotter either. I just can't see it...
Your results mirror mine, even if I'm not sure I agree with your explanation for why it works that way.Pushing air through adds heat from the fan motor to the air. The air particles getting churned, compressed and forced through the fan also raises the temperature of the "cool air" being blown into the reflector hood. In essence, reducing the cooling capability of the air resulting in (a minor) increase in hood temperature and overall tent temperatures.
Placing the fan outside negates these factors.
Pulling the air is easier on the motor due to the lack of back pressure, most likely resulting in a more efficient, higher CFM flow.
I've personally had lower tent temperatures just from pulling my air instead of pushing it like @ttystikk said.
Not minimal. When I did my back to back test, the difference was between a hood cool to the touch and one that was too hot to hold my hand on.I agree any change would be minimal.
There's got to be something to it, or maybe @ttystikk and I both just smoked a little too much before testing.
Done that before.
Yeah I'm not buying it, something about your setup must have been different other than where the fan was positioned. Ive been blowing air through my hood for a long time and it stays cool to the touch.Not minimal. When I did my back to back test, the difference was between a hood cool to the touch and one that was too hot to hold my hand on.
Yeah something about his "test" is off.I still don't see there being enough pressure to actually heat the air very much. If that was the case you could turn on the air handler blower on a central air system and it would heat the house lol.
i have to agree.Yeah I'm not buying it, something about your setup must have been different other than where the fan was positioned. Ive been blowing air through my hood for a long time and it stays cool to the touch.
Yeah something about his "test" is off.
It was an 8" fan on an 8"magnum XXXL hood with one SE 1000W HPS lamp in it. The only change was turning the fan around from blowing to sucking.i have to agree.
Thats what I am thinking too, it's the only thing that makes sense. I mean if the air is moving like it should then the whole system would be cooled. So the air isn't moving like it should.I think it has to do with the fact that when pushing the air can swirl in the hood causing turbulence and disrupting the flow of air, whereas pulling the air is going to travel the path of least resistance in a more unidirectional fashion.
At least that is my assumption. Would be interesting to test with an infrared camera.