ttystikk
Well-Known Member
This might be the best reason yet to get in on the new trend to water cool your grow; in cool weather, you can extract excess heat from your op without using a compressor unit at all; that's real, useful, substantial cooling capacity for the forty watts it takes to run the extraction fan- instead of 2000 watts for a typical 2 Ton chiller or AC unit.
I went to the junkyard and got a radiator, in my case one from a Mitsubishi Lancer. I did try to use the electric fans anyway mined in place but converting between AC and DC power is a much bigger pain in the ass than it's worth- so I just rigged up a good floor fan to do the very same job.
I got a well fitting fan shroud while at the junkyard, that helps with airflow management immensely. The air must be pulled through the radiator; if there are any gaps, seal them up with duct tape.
It's not coincidence that I'm also using a junkyard radiator for an air handler in my growroom- but here, I'm pushing the air through the radiator.
This saves major bucks; I built the whole thing for less than $125. It might save that much in electricity cost in just the first month of operation! Anytime the outside temperature is lower than your cold water threshold- mine is 50f- it can provide effective cooling. The colder it gets, the more cooling it can provide.
I went to the junkyard and got a radiator, in my case one from a Mitsubishi Lancer. I did try to use the electric fans anyway mined in place but converting between AC and DC power is a much bigger pain in the ass than it's worth- so I just rigged up a good floor fan to do the very same job.
I got a well fitting fan shroud while at the junkyard, that helps with airflow management immensely. The air must be pulled through the radiator; if there are any gaps, seal them up with duct tape.
It's not coincidence that I'm also using a junkyard radiator for an air handler in my growroom- but here, I'm pushing the air through the radiator.
This saves major bucks; I built the whole thing for less than $125. It might save that much in electricity cost in just the first month of operation! Anytime the outside temperature is lower than your cold water threshold- mine is 50f- it can provide effective cooling. The colder it gets, the more cooling it can provide.