DC 12V Thermoelectric Cooler Peltier System Semiconductor Refrigeration Water Chiller Cooling Device

JSB99

Well-Known Member
Is there something out there like this, around the same price that is complete (plug and play)?

https://www.amazon.com/Thermoelectric-Peltier-Semiconductor-Refrigeration-Chiller/dp/B07F1ZFWC6/
Waste of money. The "chilling" is very minimal, and you still have to deal with the exchanged heat, which will remain in the room, and work to warm your water back up. Even when you use an actual chiller, you have to keep the heat from the chiller from adding the exchanged heat back into the room. You either need to keep the chiller in an adjacent room, or in an isolation box that exhausts the heat externally.

The reason you don't see lots of people here using these, is because they're far from adequate to cool a body of water that's constantly being warmed up by the environment it resides in.
 

JSB99

Well-Known Member
You'd be much better of making a wort chiller. Much more effective, but not nearly as much as a chiller. Do a forum search on "wort chiller" and you'll get lots of DIY ideas.
 

JSB99

Well-Known Member
Another alternative us to do what I do, which is to use external air to blow across the water in my reservoir. I stay below 69, and it's a pretty easy setup. Much cheaper than a chiller.

Scroll down towards the bottom of my thread, and you'll see how I've got mine set up.

https://www.rollitup.org/t/which-would-produce-more-do-in-a-dwc.944432/page-55

BTW, there are two setups on the link I posted (based on the season), so check out the one in the middle of the page, then the second towards the bottom.
 

mytwhyt

Well-Known Member
Took an entirely different approach to the cooling of the reservoir.. This was a successful grow with a modified Waterfarm tech using igloo coolers for temperature control..

https://www.rollitup.org/t/the-official-dwc-cooler-club-any-kind-of-cooler-res.366114/page-37

Gonna do the same thing again, except use an Ice probe in a 10 gal Gott cooler for cooling.the reservoir.. I figure the approximate 10 gal an hour reservoir exchange rate two drip rings will produce can be kept up with by the probe.. I bought an Ink Bird heat/cool thermostat to control the probe..

Each Igloo will have its own attached 32"x32" screen and reflector panels.. Each plant will have its own 315 watt cmh light.. Two waterfarms with a 5 gal separate reservoir, no cooling, yielded 26 oz using 2 315 watt cmh lights.. Got pics if you want them...

My upside is that the swamp cooler sits on the other side of an uninsulated wall.. Eight feet of flex 2" tubing can route cooler air to the intake of the pelter when summer comes... I'll be posting this attempt on the same thread.. Have a coco/perlite grow going now.. I can post the plumbing mod that makes circulation possible if you're interested...
 

CBDforever

Member
The fan directed at the water surface works, it gets me 2 - 2,5 centigrades off (measured against the same conditions when switched off).
 

JSB99

Well-Known Member
The fan directed at the water surface works, it gets me 2 - 2,5 centigrades off (measured against the same conditions when switched off).
Yep, it's called "evaporative cooling". It will raise the humidity levels in the room, but it's a small trade-off that can easily be remedied.
 

Axion42

Well-Known Member
Yep, it's called "evaporative cooling". It will raise the humidity levels in the room, but it's a small trade-off that can easily be remedied.
How do you do this and keep light out of the res?
Does the air being blown on water need to be exhausted out of the res?
 

JSB99

Well-Known Member
How do you do this and keep light out of the res?
Does the air being blown on water need to be exhausted out of the res?
Scroll down towards the bottom of my thread, and you'll see how I've got mine set up. There are two setups, so make sure to scroll all the way to the bottom. A fan blowing across the surface of the water will take a few degrees off. Blowing cool air across the surface will drop it quite a bit. I have my res in a dark corner, but as long as there aren't any powerful lights hitting the water, it should be fine without a lid. I have a square cut out of my lid where I insert the flexible duct, which I think helps even more. If your room temps are high, you can wrap a blanket, or insulation, around the reservoir.

The air doesn't need to be exhausted. Mine blows out the other holes it the lid
https://www.rollitup.org/t/which-would-produce-more-do-in-a-dwc.944432/page-55

Something else that really helps is to use a small PC fan to blow on the water pump, if it's inline. Pumps run warm and will add heat to your water. This is a good argument for using pumps inline rather than submerged.
 

JSB99

Well-Known Member
BTW, above, when I talk about using "external air", I'm talking about using air outside of the room, not outside of the house. You definitely wouldn't want to use outside air LOL!
 
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