Trying to limp this unit along for another season. The Abq hard water is murder on these units. I scraped all the **** from the pan, sanded and coated it with this pan goop. New belt and pads, fresh oil in the cups.![]()
Can you situate it so that it pulls in outside air and at the far side of the shop leave something open for the humid air to escape? That's the problem with portable ones, if allowed to recirculate the same air over and over the air gets saturated and the cooler becomes ineffective.I have one at my shop in Amarillo on a rolling cart, doesn't help much and we have a bit more humidity.![]()
The nice thing about swamp coolers is, virtually every part is individually replaceable, and for peanuts compared to the price of parts for refrigerated A/C. Bearings, shafts, spiders, pulleys, even blower wheels. Admittedly, you might have a hard time getting the right size of replacement blower housing, so short of rust holes you can put your fist through it can probably be repaired for less than $100. (And even then, there's TIG welding or brazing...)
It looks like you have the paper honeycomb pads? Do you like them better than aspen?
Can you situate it so that it pulls in outside air and at the far side of the shop leave something open for the humid air to escape? That's the problem with portable ones, if allowed to recirculate the same air over and over the air gets saturated and the cooler becomes ineffective.
The pads on your portable or the rooftop unit? For the rooftop at least, a bleedoff line or purge pump should keep the pads clean-ish... kind of hard to do that on a portable unit though.Any pad I've used will be coated in sediment at the end of the season, so I look for one season use only.
The pads on your portable or the rooftop unit? For the rooftop at least, a bleedoff line or purge pump should keep the pads clean-ish... kind of hard to do that on a portable unit though.
I ran with swampers for a lot of years. They work, sorta. I tried all the various pads and ultimately I always ended up back with the aspen pads. Can't say any of the others were better or worse per se, but cost wise etc...I saw no reason not to use the aspen versions.
I probably won't be looking at a swamp cooler for my garage. I really don't want to deal with the rust that could result on all my machinery.
I have machine tools too (metal lathe/mill), so I know how destructive rust can be to precision surfaces. However, theoretically a swamp cooler shouldn't cause any more rust than would have formed anyway without one. Water condenses on machine surfaces when that surface is below the dew point, but no swamp cooler on the planet is 100% efficient so no swamp cooler should ever be able to cool air all the way down to the dew point.I probably won't be looking at a swamp cooler for my garage. I really don't want to deal with the rust that could result on all my machinery.
Hmm. I suppose you could run your swampy in "fan only" mode at night, or at least for 10 minutes or so before you leave, to bring in dry outside air.you raise the humidity in your shop during the day while cooling it. Shut down for the night, things (ie. machines) cool during the night, then the space heats back up in the morning. Machines are going to take longer to warm so hence you now have a cold surface with warm, moist air.
Perhaps. But what happens when you raise the humidity in your shop during the day while cooling it. Shut down for the night, things (ie. machines) cool during the night, then the space heats back up in the morning. Machines are going to take longer to warm so hence you now have a cold surface with warm, moist air. I just don't like the idea of increasing the humidity in the space which is exactly what swamp coolers do. May not be actually be a problem. Any one with real world experience?
Cheers.

I've noticed they sell these "swamp coolers" in the UK in the last few years
Absolutely incorrect.with the new seer ratings they are no cheaper to run than a better a/c unit.
I've also seen "fat" aspen pads for sale. Was thinking of trying those when my current set needs replacement. On my current set, I can definitely see spots where the pad is thin and lets a lot of light through, while other patches are thicker and darker...2nd) Double up on your pads. Two pads will fit easily.
Actually, I've got my pulley adjusted to the minimum CFM. On 'high' mode, my cooler about blows me out of the room so I see no need to push the max!To get the "theoretical" max performance out of your motor you have to adjust pulleys to the mfger
The nameplate on my motor shows 8.4A on high and 4A on low. So, a little less than half the cost of high.As to low speed, it's not half but 2/3 of high
0.9A nameplate rating here. Real-world will be less.and then add in additional draws like pump (anywhere from .5 to 1.5 amps),
Why would I need box fans when the swamper is running?box fans (up to an amp),
90-100W on high, but they get shut off when the swamper is on. The other occupants in my house all whine about how cold it gets.ceiling fans
You probably want to start your own thread in the Garage Journal Heating and A/C forum. This thread is about swampers, your question will probably not been seen by many mini split experts here.Does anyone have experience with, or maybe own, the new ultra high seer 26 mini split systems