Originally posted by CookieMonster
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Originally posted by super_dave View PostNow my wheels are turning....
Flow has to be as much as the fan will produce to be beneficial or you'll get blowback and poor cooling.
instead of blowing across the top of ice, blow through a thin walled submerged galvanized tube of ice water mix, with rock salt in it.
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I haven't made one, but this is my thinking...tell me your thoughts?
Having the fan outside the cooler, you're just sucking hot air into the cooler. You're still getting cooler air blowing out, but at the same time, that hot air is just melting your ice faster and also mixing the hot air with the cold air inside the cooler.
Why not make it where the fan is inside the cooler? Now you're sucking cold air instead of hot air, allowing your ice to last longer and your exiting air to be cooler.
Wouldn't that work, or am I missing something?Last edited by Sleepy; 07-08-2014, 10:16 PM.
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Redneck Air Conditioner
Originally posted by BtechDestroyer View PostI haven't made one, but this is my thinking...tell me your thoughts?
Having the fan outside the cooler, you're just sucking hot air into the cooler. You're still getting cooler air blowing out, but at the same time, that hot air is just melting your ice faster and also mixing the hot air with the cold air inside the cooler.
Why not make it where the fan is inside the cooler? Now you're sucking cold air instead of hot air, allowing your ice to last longer and your exiting air to be cooler.
Wouldn't that work, or am I missing something?
However much air is coming out, the exact same amount is coming in. The theory of displacement.
If the ice is melting fast, it's cooling the air fast. Either need less air or more ice.
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Originally posted by drop dead fred View PostHuh
If you submerge a tube in an icy bath, you have mucho surface area to transfer heat from the air to the cold surface. Salt will actually lower the temp of the water in the bath. Also like moser said, it's a displacement thing. If your tube out is not big enough to accommodate all that your fan can blow, the inside will pressure up and a lot of air will come back out the fan side reducing your cold air flow.
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Seems I remember hot air rises and cold air drops. Why not flip the fan around so you are drawing warm air in the sides and blowing cool-cold air up. That way you are cooling the warmer air. Applicable for a blind/stand.
In my truck when I first get in, I aim my vents up towards the headliner and it seem to cool off quicker.
I know one Bowhican that will be buying a bucket, solar powered fan and some dry ice for his deer stand.
LOTB
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