Ahhh it was 33 degrees C in my bedroom Tuesday night and the humidity
made it feel more like 48 degrees! I did manage to sleep but I admit
the following day I ran the AC for a couple of hours in the evening
till it was down to 28. I still wouldn't want to sleep on a cold
surface, and what would you do about condensation in the bedding?
No blackout yet but we have had some very violent thunderstorms and one
tornado that touched down in farm land without killing anyone. There's
getting to be a lot of tornados in the last few years.
Joe
Kirk McLoren wrote:
If you had been in my house last week. The ac blew Friday night
and Saturday we set a record high.
A cold bed would have been marvelous.
Hey
Kirk;
Ever slept on a waterbed that got unplugged and woken up at 4 am
shivering? Cooling my bed....uh ...no thanks.
Joe
Kirk McLoren wrote:
Yes but using water like that certainly is only possible for
a few. Most water systems are stressed already. The best method would
be to use the latent heat of evaporation. It is important to know the
relative humidity where you are.
The "koolsuit" is a legitimate suggestion. 10 pounds of ice
in a backpack with circulatory system for arms and legs is a viable low
energy low impact system.
1 pound of water water will absorb 1 BTU when raised 1
degree F. If you need many BTU the volume becomes considerable.
Just as using fluorescent instead of tungsten makes sense so
does limiting cooling to a suit and mattress also make sense.
We need to soften our impact on the world around us.
Understood.
But, why would I care if the sewer is a good heat sink? I suggested
that the sewer be used as a way of discharging water after it had
absorbed heat from inside the house (or apartment).
I'm interested in finding a medium which is better than hot summer air
for cooling the condenser and proposed that water, already cooled from
being underground has the same benefit as geoexchange without the cost
of digging a hole.
- Redler
Kirk McLoren wrote:
Sewer lines are engineered for the load. Trust me they
didnt install larger pipes so you can use them as a heat sink.
The smaller the load the cheaper to refrigerate. A
"koolsuit" would take maybe 300 watts.
The rule of thumb in ac sizing is a ton per dozen
occupants.
Bob, Joe, et al
Sure, that much I knew. But, what I meant by "on the cheap" was to use
the existing infrastructure (i.e. existing, underground water lines) as
the ground source instead of requiring a new hole to be dug. Sewer
lines could be used as a conduit for sending heat out of the house (or
apartment). Perhaps the heated water could be contained and used as
domestic hot water for the laundry (for example). I know that there is
at least one company in Florida that pumps heat from one's attic into
the domestic hot water supply so, it's quite possible.
Using city water and sewer lines as conduit for ground sourcing
wouldn't be a closed loop and I'm not sure of the volume (cost) of
water required for it to be effective. The part I like about it is the
apparent low cost in implementing it. In areas of the city where
digging a hole gets complicated, this might be an effective alternative.
-Redler
bob allen wrote:
It's being done all over the country. It's called ground source heat pumps. the condenser uses the ground (more specifically water in it) as
the heat sink. It is fairly simple set up if you have a well. If not a contractor Takes a back hoe and lays plastic pipe horizontally for hundreds of feet a couple of feet down. http://www.geoexchange.org/ now if you mean is anybody "rolling their own" water cooled air condenser, I don't know. Mike Redler wrote:
Hi everyone, As with many in this forum, I've been trying to stay cool today without switching on the AC. It's tempting but, so far I've resisted. I was standing under the shower head, thinking about what my air conditioner might be doing had it been turned on. Specifically, how the condenser responds to a difference in temperature and how that difference kinda sucks on an especially hot day. That lead me to a question. What would happen if you used cool city water to collect condenser heat? The warm water could then be sent down the
drain and discarded. I'm just thinking out loud here and I wouldn't be at all surprised if someone else tried this. If so, please speak up. I wouldn't want to reinvent the wheel here. I have absolutely no numbers to back up the viability of this idea but, I do know that water is a better conductor of heat than (dry) air and the difference in temperature (outside air temp - city water temp) can conceivably be 35+ degrees F. It's so damn hot, I'm thinking of dissecting an air conditioner or dehumidifier and adapting it to my bathtub right now, with a fan blowing the cool air into the hallway. Of course, if the energy savings were not substantial I'd be kind of annoyed at myself for not crunching the numbers first. ...any thoughts? -Redler
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