I just got this one. It's quiet, and moves a lot of air for cheap.http://www.hydroponics.net/i/133758Hello
I am running a 4 ft by 2 ft by 5 ft
I was wondering what kind of fan do I need to exhaust the air, as well as pull it through the inline filter.
What is the cheapest fan that will get the job done?
I just got this one. It's quiet, and moves a lot of air for cheap.http://www.hydroponics.net/i/133758
Take the length x width x hight(depth)= cubic volume. Hope that helps a little and good luck ;-Dwell... a fan that can pull out ur cubic feets per min. (CFM) find out ur cubic footage... i forget how to.. im so fuckin ripped.
but remember. to get make an inlet.. and get intake int othe grow box(another inline fan facing the other way)
1x inline fan to exhaust
1x inline fan for intake.
and a inlet for the negative space
thats if ur using that grow set up
well, il be running a 400 watt hps through a air scrubber, so i need something powerful and quiet.Take the length x width x hight(depth)= cubic volume. Hope that helps a little and good luck ;-D
Thanks guys.Depends on the intake temps really, if they stay below 75 I'd say 150-200 cfm would do, but you can't skimp on ventilation, it's what stops your babies cooking!
It is far easier to manage temps if you get a fan bigger than you need, then run it on a fan speed controller, thermostat, or both wired in parallel so it runs at say, half speed until the temp rises and the thermostat gives it the full juice until it cools down again, rather than have a fan that will just about keep it within acceptable ranges running flat out the whole time the light is on.
Also, intake fans are COMPLETELY UNNECESSARY. At best they waste energy, by moving the same amount of air that would flow into the growroom from the exhaust fan lowering the pressure. If the intake fan were too small, it would restrict the amount of air that could flow in, too big and it would raise the pressure, creating odour leaks and possibly raising the temperature (with any gas, if you raise the pressure the temperature rises, air is no exception).
i think im going to go with a s&p 100x. My room is 35 cubic feet, and with a scrubber that should be enough to ventilate the air. Also, the basement air is pretty cool, so i figure it will be enough to keep the hps in its place.A four inch inlet isn't really that large, but then it depends what you're comparing it to.
As for the site not having much info on ventilation, there's a whole section on it in the faq https://www.rollitup.org/view.php?pg=faq&cmd=category&id=67 which told me everything I needed to know.
Hello
I am running a 4 ft by 2 ft by 5 ft
I was wondering what kind of fan do I need to exhaust the air, as well as pull it through the inline filter.
What is the cheapest fan that will get the job done?
Did you not read the post where he said there was a 400w hps in that space? You vent the room every five minutes if your using fluoros, if using hid then you should have the capacity to vent the room 2-5 times a minute, so up to 200cfm, +50 for the ductwork and filter.You have forty cubic feet..4x2x5, equals forty. Now you divide by five, for the amount of air you need to exchange within five minutes, you get eight cubic feet of air you need to move every five minutes. I think a six inch fan is overkill. A four inch fan will do you just fine, generally they move around 170 cubic feet a minute. Don't waste your money on a six inch fan.
look into a solar palau td125 or 125x they are powerful and quietwell, il be running a 400 watt hps through a air scrubber, so i need something powerful and quiet.
I'm sorry tea tree, but negative pressure doesn't make fans work harder. It makes the air slightly thinner, and so the air creates slightly less resistance on the fan blades. If the passive intake is almost the same size as the exhaust fan, then the air should have no more resistance moving from inside the room out as it does getting from one end of the room to the other.
If the intake is smaller than the exhaust then you are creating more negative pressure than simply having a passive intake, think about it! If you have a fan that blows in say half of what the exhaust is blowing out, then the lower pressure inside the room will cause the air to try to rush in, but it will be slowed by the poxy little fan in the way!