NorCalTransplant
Well-Known Member
I don't think the garage is the problem, you are using a bunch of lights that don't work well together. And like Duder said, you should always run your lights at night whenever possible.
MedicineMaker said that ^_^Wow guys, thank you for your answers. You guys definitely know your shit! God I love this forum.
Someone suggested frozen gallons of water (Joe) . I'm already doing this, but not in the room, I have to keep frozen gallons in my res so it doesn't go stagnant in this heat, unfortunately the 3 gallons I use to rotate that pretty much fill my freezer. I dig your idea though..
I went with one very similar to this. Same brand, but with a higher SEER rating... Doubt that's going to make much difference. Also looked into my electricity situation, and apparently the house is wired for 50 amps more than (usual) with plenty of open breaker slots.go to ebay and you can find complete systems that run on 115v, may have to stay with 12,000btu for 115v though.
here
http://cgi.ebay.com/KLIMAIRE-DUCTLESS-MINI-SPLIT-AC-HEAT-PUMP-13-SEER-18000-/330572661167?pt=Air_Conditioner&hash=item4cf7aa81af
higher seer,lower electric bill, good jobI went with one very similar to this. Same brand, but with a higher SEER rating... Doubt that's going to make much difference. Also looked into my electricity situation, and apparently the house is wired for 50 amps more than (usual) with plenty of open breaker slots.
This unit is going to require a 220v outlet, but the fact that the breaker box is on the outside of the room tells me I should be able to just run a power feed throgh a whole. I'm assuming it only 3 wires.
I really think this things going to do the trick. I think your right, it's going to get the heat out of the entire garage, rather than fill my only air inlet option with all the hot air from the room. I'm pretty excited ....
Thanks again for all the great suggestions fellas. Nugs and hugs!
DO NOT JUST FEED OFF THE DRYERS 60 Amp Breaker. A full size dryer has a 5,000 Watt element plus the motor wattage, throw an A/C 18,000 btu Ductless Split (that will run a lot) and you'll blow the breaker every time you dry your clothes while trying to keep the ladies cool. Just install a new circuit for the love of Christ, and a ductless split is the way to go but you'll still need a drain for the evap. coil.You just need 2 empty circuits in the breaker box or feed off the 220 breaker for the dryer. You may want to get a pro involved.
I was thinking if you have plants in your garage, are they also in an enclosed box of some sort? If they aren't, the frozen bottle thing would only really work in a small room or growbox to cool the small rooms air rather than a whole garage.Heh, sorry MedicineMaker, I was a bit medicated . Good idea thouh... I supposed you could almost put em between the plants.
You only need two open slots side by side || Double pole Single Throw breaker. And yes the drain would be needed for the inside part, the moisture in the air passed over the evaporator freezes to the coil and when it cycles (off) the water collects in a drip pan and run out the drain hole. The outside part is a condenser and compressor unit and does not require a drain but you may want to keep it out of sight so people do get any ideas about it. Wiring up a circuit is not hard just throw the main disconnect coming in and hook up the wires. Refer to a DiY site if needed but it'll hook up much like the stove or dryer circuit.Yep, I plan on installing a new circuit. I don't have access to a pro unfortunately and don't trust anyone anyways..., and m a total n00b with the electric part of this, but it's something I need to learn, as I'm sure it's going to come up again some day.
So I think I hav 5 open slots on the box. Do they make a single 220v breaker I can stick in a slot or do I have to bridge t2o 110s?
I have some reading to do, but the skimming I have done so far says it's easy...
Agree 100%...I'm going to make the obvious suggestion here: switch your lighting cycle so that your lights are on when the sun is down and off when it's up