jtbinvalrico
Well-known member
I live in FL.......and it's blazing hot in the garage. I usually use my big air mover to break the heat, but it's still stifling. I may have an idea:
I've looked into what are called Swamp Coolers and the Port A Cool units. The main problem here, if I understand them correctly, is that you are going to have a significant humidity increase in the garage due to the misting of water.....if I'm wrong on that, please correct me.
Some time ago, I built a unit designed to heat my pool using hot attic air. (A company called Solar Attic makes this product commercially). What you are basically doing is piping water from your cool pool into the attic and through a radiator while using a fan to blow the hot air through it. The moving air pulls the "cool" off the water, resulting in warmer water being returned to the pool. What I immediately noticed about my unit in operation was the tremendous amount of cool air blowing into the attic as a result of this liquid-air heat exchange.....I tripped into a HeatPro heat pump for my pool. The heat pump was so efficient that it caused me to abandon my project....By efficient I mean 89 degrees in the pool for 9 months of the year at about $40 a month to run it.
So, what did I learn from all that? I had considered revisiting the idea in smaller form to cool my shop. The idea calls for a fan, radiator, and water. The question was in the water....I would need a source of circulating water to allow this "heat exchange." I could simply use a reservoir of water in a tank.....but that water would heat up and lose it's effectiveness while in use. I could source water from the pool, pump it toward the shop and back to the pool to get the effect, but that water is already hot enough.
My idea: Bury a loop of pipe in the ground alongside the house to act as a heat sink. Build a box for the fan. On the back side of the box situate a radiator(s) through which the water will be circulated with a simple pump.
So I submit this idea to the forum. I've learned a little about Delta T and such from an engineer buddy.....but I'm a tinkerer, no expert. My first step is to take some temperature measurements to help determine how deep the pipe should be buried.
My original project had four Honda Accord radiators situated in a cube, with the top sealed and the fan exhausting on the bottom. The system was pumped off of my 1hp pool pump and added maybe 4lbs of pressure to my filter gauge. I used about 80' of 2" flex piping. The fan moved about 6000cfm. The amount of cold air this thing made was crazy.
Questions/opinions sought:
1) How long should this pipe be?
2) What material for the pipe, to best facilitate the heat exchange in the ground?
3) What size pipe?
4) What flow rate should be sought?
5) How deep should this pipe be buried?
6) My garage is standard two-car.....how many cfms on the fan?
7) I had about 1500 sq inches of radiator....How many to cool the garage?
Lots and lots of variables here.
I've looked into what are called Swamp Coolers and the Port A Cool units. The main problem here, if I understand them correctly, is that you are going to have a significant humidity increase in the garage due to the misting of water.....if I'm wrong on that, please correct me.
Some time ago, I built a unit designed to heat my pool using hot attic air. (A company called Solar Attic makes this product commercially). What you are basically doing is piping water from your cool pool into the attic and through a radiator while using a fan to blow the hot air through it. The moving air pulls the "cool" off the water, resulting in warmer water being returned to the pool. What I immediately noticed about my unit in operation was the tremendous amount of cool air blowing into the attic as a result of this liquid-air heat exchange.....I tripped into a HeatPro heat pump for my pool. The heat pump was so efficient that it caused me to abandon my project....By efficient I mean 89 degrees in the pool for 9 months of the year at about $40 a month to run it.
So, what did I learn from all that? I had considered revisiting the idea in smaller form to cool my shop. The idea calls for a fan, radiator, and water. The question was in the water....I would need a source of circulating water to allow this "heat exchange." I could simply use a reservoir of water in a tank.....but that water would heat up and lose it's effectiveness while in use. I could source water from the pool, pump it toward the shop and back to the pool to get the effect, but that water is already hot enough.
My idea: Bury a loop of pipe in the ground alongside the house to act as a heat sink. Build a box for the fan. On the back side of the box situate a radiator(s) through which the water will be circulated with a simple pump.
So I submit this idea to the forum. I've learned a little about Delta T and such from an engineer buddy.....but I'm a tinkerer, no expert. My first step is to take some temperature measurements to help determine how deep the pipe should be buried.
My original project had four Honda Accord radiators situated in a cube, with the top sealed and the fan exhausting on the bottom. The system was pumped off of my 1hp pool pump and added maybe 4lbs of pressure to my filter gauge. I used about 80' of 2" flex piping. The fan moved about 6000cfm. The amount of cold air this thing made was crazy.
Questions/opinions sought:
1) How long should this pipe be?
2) What material for the pipe, to best facilitate the heat exchange in the ground?
3) What size pipe?
4) What flow rate should be sought?
5) How deep should this pipe be buried?
6) My garage is standard two-car.....how many cfms on the fan?
7) I had about 1500 sq inches of radiator....How many to cool the garage?
Lots and lots of variables here.







