Assuming this worked, how do I make this? I assume its a air conditioning.. I see

Assuming this worked, how do I make this? I assume its a air conditioning.. I see
copper pipes, presumably circulating water via pipe, why i dont know

an ice box... a fan... this has to be an air conditioner right? so how does it work, how would you make one? shouldnt there be a pump

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  1. 1 year ago
    Anonymous
  2. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    It’s not summer yet, people are trying to jury rig air conditioners already?

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      It's hot season in the southern hemisphere.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      >It’s not summer yet,
      It's always summer on PrepHole

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        I see what you did there.

  3. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Put the water in the freezer.
    The freezer removes heat from water, puts it in the room.
    You stick the water in the room, and the room puts heat into the water.
    Then you put the water into the freezer.
    The freezer removes heat from water, puts it in the room.
    You stick the water in the room, and the room puts heat into the water.
    Then you put the water into the freezer.
    The freezer removes heat from water, puts it in the room.
    You stick the water in the room, and the room puts heat into the water.
    Then you put the water into the freezer.
    The freezer removes heat from water, puts it in the room.
    You stick the water in the room, and the room puts heat into the water.
    Then you put the water into the freezer.
    The freezer removes heat from water, puts it in the room.
    You stick the water in the room, and the room puts heat into the water.
    Then you put the water into the freezer.
    The freezer removes heat from water, puts it in the room.
    You stick the water in the room, and the room puts heat into the water.
    Then you put the water into the freezer.
    The freezer removes heat from water, puts it in the room.
    You stick the water in the room, and the room puts heat into the water.
    Then you put the water into the freezer.
    The freezer removes heat from water, puts it in the room.
    You stick the water in the room, and the room puts heat into the water.
    Then you put the water into the freezer.
    The freezer removes heat from water, puts it in the room.
    You stick the water in the room, and the room puts heat into the water.
    Then you put the water into the freezer.
    The freezer removes heat from water, puts it in the room.
    You stick the water in the room, and the room puts heat into the water.
    Then you put the water into the freezer.

    It's garbage.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      >put water in freezer overnight when its cold out
      >put ice in front of fan during the day when its hot out
      problem???

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        This makes sense.

        Also you don't necessarily have to use ice from your own freezer.
        Where I live, the cold water out of the tap is cool enough year-round to make this work.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        build house from stone and insulate the outside.

        temperature stays the same all day

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          Americans are scared of and confused at that image

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          That graphic clearly shows that the temperature has already been regulated to a steady state at the inside of the insulation, so it wouldn't matter whether the structure was masonry, steel, or wood, it would remain the same temperature regardless

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            here only with insulation, and drywall, the lime plaster helps to.

            you get quite a temperature shift inside.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >problem???
        Yeah.
        You warm up house overnight with freezer condenser. Sun comes up and starts heating your house from a higher initial temperature.

    • 1 year ago
      Bepis

      This

      https://i.imgur.com/CPfvrX2.jpg

      This probably costs more than a cheap window unit and I’m sure it’s inefficient as hell too.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >it’s inefficient as hell
        Its a couple bucks for a giant bag of ice from the grocery store, pump and a fan run with normal A/C anyways so we can disregard their cost. Its actually and literally the most efficient A/C out there.

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          A small window AC unit will cost you at most maybe $1.50 in electricity per day. Compare that to how much it costs to run the fan, run the pump, drive to the store and back, and purchase X number of bags of ice per day (you'll be likely to go through more than 1 bag a day)

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            >and purchase X number of bags of ice per day (you'll be likely to go through more than 1 bag a day)
            That's easy. One ton of ice (latent heat of fusion) is 288k BTU or 12k BTU/hr over a 24 h period. That makes one pound of ice worth 6 BTU/hr. A window unit is probably in the neighborhood of 3k-10k BTU/hr.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        wait, you're not OP, why are you tripgayging?

        (sorry for the triple post)

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      this is assuming he’s not buying ice. If you buy ice it works. or if your room is sufficiently seperate from the fridge.

  4. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    >I assume its a air conditioning
    this is how I cool my GPU

  5. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Skip the copper pipes and box fan, just get a radiator made for the purpose.

  6. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    >Assuming this worked
    it doesn't.
    next thread pls

  7. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    >shouldnt there be a pump
    It's in the tub of ice water, genius.

  8. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Just buy a window AC unit. You can get a 5k BTU one for $175, it will cool WAY better, it will be far less of a pain in the ass to use, and it's far more energy efficient than constantly freezing large amounts of water in your freezer.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      With the price of electricity in Denmark the running costs of a window unit would put you in generational debt.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >Living in Europe after the year 2000
        ISHYDDT

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        I guarantee you that it uses more electricity to freeze a bunch of ice in your freezer and convert that into cold air in a room than it does to just run a small AC unit to do the same amount of cooling.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      >Assuming this worked
      It doesn't.
      >presumably circulating water
      The styrofoam cooler is filled with ice and has a pump in it. The pump circulates water through the ice to cool it before it goes to the copper loop attached the fan, where air blows over the copper and gets cooled by heat transfer before heading back to the ice to do it all again.

      This.

      This makes sense.

      Also you don't necessarily have to use ice from your own freezer.
      Where I live, the cold water out of the tap is cool enough year-round to make this work.

      >Where I live, the cold water out of the tap is cool enough year-round to make this work
      No, it isn't. "Cold" water out of the tap will warm up much faster than ice, meaning you'll need to change the water out a lot more often.

      With the price of electricity in Denmark the running costs of a window unit would put you in generational debt.

      Trying real hard to feel bad for ya.

      I think the design would be more efficient if the coils were behind the fan instead of infront of it, unless the motor gets really hot.

      Literally makes no difference. The motor doesn't draw enough amps to produce an amount of heat that would matter.

      Refrigerator compressors are not made to do that kind of cooling. They are sized to keep a small volume of air cold which inside a highly insulated box. If you do what you show in your diagram, it's either not going to amount to any real cooling or it's going to kill the compressor. Or both. A window AC unit would use less power to cool better and would last much longer doing it.

      He was shitposting not being serious.

      >it’s inefficient as hell
      Its a couple bucks for a giant bag of ice from the grocery store, pump and a fan run with normal A/C anyways so we can disregard their cost. Its actually and literally the most efficient A/C out there.

      >pump and a fan run with normal A/C anyways so we can disregard their cost.
      Actually, if you're going to disregard their cost then there's no good reason to do this instead of getting a window AC. If they are the same price to you, why would you choose the most inefficient method? Or are you just frickin moronic?

      By time you waste your money and time on the parts for this meme cooler you could've just gotten a window unit and been way more comfortable for about the same amount of electricity. Not only that, but this fricking monstrosity takes up a ton of space in the room instead of the wimdow AND you have to keep taking this shit all apart so you can dump the warm water out and refill it with ice.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >No, it isn't. "Cold" water out of the tap will warm up much faster than ice, meaning you'll need to change the water out a lot more often.
        Yes, but that doesn't mean it doesn't work.
        I literally used cold water for this back when I had a third-floor apartment ... one summer day was unbearably hot, and the A/C window unit wasn't doing enough, so I filled the bathtub with cold water and ran a fan in the bathroom doorway. It cooled the apartment down.
        >"Cold" water out of the tap will warm up much faster than ice
        That's the whole point of the contraption. Water is taking heat out of the air. If the water is warming up, that means the air is cooling down.
        As the water approaches the ambient air temperature, drain the tub and fill it again.
        Simple as.

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          No need to drain the tub, just put a cutting board or something in it under the tap so the water flows across the whole bottom and let it sit with a moderate flow. The tub will be chilled and the pipes leading to it will be constantly refreshed with cool water and lower the temperature of the walls gradually.

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            You'll also get loads of condensation off the copper coil that the fan will then blow everywhere.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        > Actually, if you're going to disregard their cost then there's no good reason to do this instead of getting a window AC.
        Excess solar energy. Freeze a large amount of water at solar peak and use it with this method for the solar downtime. Cuts energy use from the grid or batteries enormously. I have a large house and some 20 kWh excess solar even on a bad day up to 40 kWh on a good, so I'm tempted to fix some kind of ice making machine and submerge a copper air intake pipe in the ice water bath permanently, this should permanently reduce the air intake temperature and thus the energy needed to cool it to a target temperature while the ice lasts

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          >Freeze a large amount of water at solar peak and use it with this method for the solar downtime.
          Large office buildings do this already. They get preferable rates overnight and make the ice. It's a very efficient way to time shift the load.

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            Yeah i saw there are some large commercially available units to do it too even so makes sense, the vast majority of my energy usage is cooling, too so i can't see much of a downside in doing this, i
            I am thinking some kind of high wattage icemaker outside that i will rig to hass and autodump on full state to a large insulated container, radiant pipe loops in the container, insulated run from there to the intake on the household ac units, when they draw air in they will thus draw chilled air through the precooling apparatus.

  9. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    I think the design would be more efficient if the coils were behind the fan instead of infront of it, unless the motor gets really hot.

  10. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Do this

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      Refrigerator compressors are not made to do that kind of cooling. They are sized to keep a small volume of air cold which inside a highly insulated box. If you do what you show in your diagram, it's either not going to amount to any real cooling or it's going to kill the compressor. Or both. A window AC unit would use less power to cool better and would last much longer doing it.

  11. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Fricking europoors man I'm tellin ya.

  12. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    >shouldnt there be a pump
    your brain is right on the cusp of getting larger

  13. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Why do this people use fricking ice for these things ????
    I just jury rigged circulation from floor heating to our well that is 5 degrees Celsius even at hottest days.

  14. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Just get a free AC off Craigslist. They’re available year round.

  15. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Can i do this for heat? I have old air units i was going to rig up one radiator near the flame and one in my shop. With a circulation pump and fan in the shop side. I only question the efficiency, i only need it warm.

  16. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Just buy a portable ac unit. I got one second hand for $100. Cleaned out some dust and it's like new.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      >single hose unit

      you know those actually suck the air from inside to cool the condenser coils and blow the hot air outside. you are basically cooling the air to just have it blown outside to keep the condenser cool so it doesnt overjheat

      always get the 2 hose model that pulls outside air to cool the condenser and blows it right back outside so the evaporator can actually cool the room without the rooms air being used to cool the condenser.

  17. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Fill the tubing with ammonia and you're well on your way to inventing air-conditioning again, over 100 years after it's already been invented.

  18. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    It works if you're looking for something a bit better than just a fan. That being said, just get something purpose-built. It'll be more efficient and actually help during hot days. These also don't work so well when it's humid, so good luck in those climates.

  19. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    I had to use one of these when I lived in an apartment that didn't allow window AC. It's absolutely better than a fan and cheaper than a portable AC, if nothing else.

  20. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    imagine putting this much effort into your air conditioning

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      Imagine not tinkering, learning and having fun.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        >Imagine not tinkering, learning and having fun.
        Imagine wasting time and money making some meme contraption you saw on the internet because you lack the common sense needed to realize beforehand that it's a moronic idea that won't work.
        Even worse, imagine making this bullshit and then giving yourself a pat on the back for your effort even after you realize it doesn't work.

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