Oh boy, fans!
My name is SternWake, and I am a muffin fan addict.
I only have 5 running as I type this.
Haha.
This post will detail how my ventilation has evolved over the years, and it is not done yet, as they keep making better fans which move more air for less noise made and less electricity used. Skip to the end if your eyes cross as it will be a long post.
First thing I did, back in 2001 after purchasing my Conversion Van, was cut an ~ 4 inch hole in my fiberglass roof to accommodate a Nicro marine solar powered fan similar to this:
http://www.marinco.com/en/n20704s.
Hardly a massive air mover at ~1000 Cubic feet per hour but it was sooo much better than nothing, and at the time I did not spend much time inside, and the goal was to keep from baking the wax off my surfboards strapped to the ceiling, and it worked well at that.
For some reason, probably ignorance, this was all I had for the next 6 years
Late in 2007 I had acquired some 120MM computer muffin fans, but never really put them into use for regulating internal temps until the next year, when I started feeding my growing addiction to them
One day I rigged up one of the slower muffin fans onto the Nicro vent, even though it was bigger than the Nicrovent, and I opened my door on a hot day expecting the usual hot temps, and found they were not as hot as expected. At this point I had 130 watts of solar on the roof and battery depletion was not a concern
Later on I made a step down ring from 4.75"(120mm) to 4" so the fan could better push air out the ceiling. it worked well, but the fan I was using was rated at only 50 CFM. I had purchased another fan of a different design and noticed that it spun in the opposite direction to the fan blades of the other fan. When I put the second fan to feed the first fan, the airflow increased by a large margin, and the noise decreased as well.
I tried putting 2 fans whose blades spun the same direction inline, but the noise increased greatly and it did not really move much more air, if any more at all.
So at this stage I had the 3 fans exhausting air through the original Nicro Mushroom vent. I then removed the Nicro fan blade from the nicro vent and noise went down, air movement increased. I then would up removing the Nicad battery from the Nicro vent, cutting the wire to the motor from the battery, and covering the solar panel on the Nicro vent and now it turned into a passive mushroom vent.
Now I had good air flow with just the one fan blowing, if I needed more airflow, I plugged in the second fan. I will guess it was combined, about 90 CFM. Each fan was about 50 CFM blowing through the somewhat restrictive Nicro Mushroom vent.
The great thing about the Nicro was that it is rain proof, no worrying about opening or closing it.
But 100 CFM could surely be improved upon. So began the search. What I wanted was an Adjustable Speed fan, and what I found was the Silverstone FM121
http://www.amazon.com/SilverStone-FM121-Control-Designs-120X120X25mm/dp/B000BWEIFU
This one moved upto 110 CFM and had a dial for any speed desired between 37 and 110 CFM. When I put this on my ceiling and fed it with the feeder fan the airflow dwarfed the previous setup, and all was well, temporarily in muffin fan addict land.
My conversion Van has the sliding windows at the bottom of the conversion van windows, and opening one of these and cranking both fans would have a good airflow entering the van through that screened window. I also have a tight mesh Chicken wire over that window for security. Painted flat black.
So this was good, but not enough for an Addict, so I started trying other fans, but none really could compare to the Silverstone. They might cost less but they made more noise, consumed more juice and moved less air.
I still have that original Silverstone on my Ceiling, but I have replaced the impeller as i damaged it. I Almost Never turn it off. I put the speed control dial where I can easily reach it from bed, or from my 3rd chair.
Now the counter rotating Feeder fan is pretty key for when more airflow is needed. My original fan suffered some abuse but I jury rigged it, and it still works but it is retired. Here is the Updated version I replaced it with.
http://www.amazon.com/Arctic-Coolin...=1401070970&sr=1-9&keywords=Arctic+cooling+12
It had a unique vibration dispersion method and is very quiet. I have it held to the Silverstone with magnets which hold the provided screws together and holds the fans about 1/4 inch apart. These two fans together, I will estimate, move 150 CFM and draw .55 amps with the Silverstone on high. Turning the Arctic fan on when the silverstone is on high reduces the noise made by about 35%, and moves a LOT more air.
Here is one Pic I already have Uploaded with the two inline fans connected to my Step down ring. I have some Oak Tongs that basically hold the step down ring tight to my Ceiling. they were a temporary solution I made in 2008, which are still there.
Basically with a window open and these fans on High, i can cook pasta without fogging the windows. The fans have suffered no ill effects from exhausting cooking fumes/ gasses/ vapors and I have no fear of CO poisoning. I basically cook on a single burner propane stove placed on the floor directly below these fans and have done so exclusively for the last 7 years.
So this covers my roof exhaust fans. I have plans to further improve this area which I will go into later.
That Sliding conversion van window with the chicken wire, well that obviously needed fans too. I made a plywood shroud, painted it flat black, and stuck 3 120MM fans in it. Sadly the Silverstone fans do not prove to be very durable in this location. The moisture at night eats away the solder joints on the circuit boards, and the speed control seems to fail first.
Also the Silverstone's quality seems to have degraded as the replacements do not seem as well made to me. My current one is now ticking at slow speed. I have spare bearings and impellers for it, from old fans which failed, but have not swapped parts yet.
I think my Current Silverstone is ticking, because i apinted the White Impeller black, and through out the balance. previous fans I darkened with a Black Sharpie to make them less visible from the exterior.
The other two fans besides the SS in the photo above are among the first fans I bought. They move a lot of air but take .7 amps and make a lot of noise, and will slice the tip off of ones finger.
Basically the hotter it gets, the more I slide the window open and the more fan I turn on. I had all three on earlier today when Lying in bed reading. they are right next to my head.
At night in hotter weather, I will leave the non clicking SS fan running on low all night long, inches from my ears. I have a black curtain which redirects air away from me if I so choose. I really like the White noise factor and often will crank the fans just to drown out ambient noises from screaming kids or such.
So Those are my Primary Exhaust and Intake fans, and they, along with A white paint job, insulation over the windows keeping sunlight out, and radiated heat suppressed, can keep my interior cooler or no hotter than Ambient temps, at least until late afternoon when temps fall faster than the van can radiate the heat from itself.
Those are not my only Fans. I have a small 60MM fan in the passenger side footwell currently sucking air out. Generally I hang my Wetsuit in this area so this assists in drying it.
Now I also have fans to blow directly at me inside the Van. The Intake and exhaust fans make a slight breeze inside, but sometiumes one just needs a fan blowing right at ones body.
For this I still wanted variable speed so I Employed a variable voltage Ciggy plug adapter and mated it to a fan.
Vantech was the brand of the first Muffin Fan I acquired, and it was efficient and quiet but fragile.
Here is the Fan blowing air nearly silently at me at 3 volts as I type. At 12v it is a screaming Banchee can move a dense narrow column of air directly across my whole van. On a smooth table at 12v, it will claw its way across the table just from the airflow. I love it!!
http://www.amazon.com/Vantec-TD9238...401072634&sr=1-1&keywords=vantec+tornado+92mm
This was the first voltage controller I used. I modified the dial to turn with fngers.
http://www.amazon.com/12V-2A-DC-To-Converter/dp/B000KGIDOY/ref=pd_sxp_grid_i_1_2.
I no longer use this voltage controller as it burnt out after a few years. My fault as I did not tighten the internal heatsink properly with some loc-tite. Its same model replacement failed for no Discernable reason.
I went with this model instead and So far so Good. Much easier to switch voltages/speeds too, and without modification.
http://www.amazon.com/PowerLine-Universal-Adapter-Compatibility-90305/dp/B0042X8XOQ/ref=pd_cp_e_1
I mounted the Fan onto an 8" Adjustable Gooseneck, and mounted that to a 2 inch Metal Spring Clamp. So I can clamp in in dozens of different positions and plug it into several different ciggy plugs all around my Van and aim the airflow pretty much anywhere.
This Fan is awesome. I also have the 80MM version too. In fact I'd recommend the 80mm over the 92mm version as it moves nearly as much air but it is quieter and consumes less juice.
The following photo is not exactly representative as to how the fan is today. I got a new Clamp, painted it black, put rubber cushions on the business end and cleaned up the wiring. The 92mm version draws 1 amp on 12v and somthing like 0.08 amps at 3 volts. It will not run a 1.5 volts, and sometimes does not want to start at 3 volts. In general I use it most at 7.5 volts. Anything higher, and I must be super hot.
Currently I am not using the 80Mm version. But I have plans for it. and they include a longer gooseneck and a PWM motor speed controller. More on that in a bit.
Now My fridge is another matter. My first fridge A Norcold DE 0040, had a passive condenser. that portion which transfers heat sucked from the interior to the atmosphere. I built my cabinet to house this fridge so that this passive condenser was right below my middle conversion van sliding window. I attached a Louvered vent to the window exterior, painted it black to allow the heat to escape.
While the cabinet was still in the planning stages, i was running the fridge in my parents garage, in Florida in Summer time, and was Dismayed by how oftern the compressor was running. I did not think my yet to be installed 130 watt solar system would keep up, So I went a little overboard in my attempts to make the fridge more efficient. And you guessed it, more muffin fans. Actually this is where my Muffin fan Madness started.
I wound up adding insulation to the fridge body and adding a small fan to blow cool air onto the condenser from below and another fan to the interior, and when I finally got everything hooked up, I realized the 130 watts was more than enough and I likely did not need to go through the extra efforts, but I am glad I did.
That Norcold was a loud SOB though. It lasted about 5 years before it ran low on refrigerant and failed. I had made improvements to the insulation for both noise and temp insulative purposes but it still was loud enough to annoy me greatly.
I replaced it with A Vitrifrigo, and was glad I built the cabinet to accommodate the extra insulation as it made it easier to accommodate the slightly larger Vitrifrigo and it's extra insulation too.
The VF fridge comes with a Danfoss compressor and a Forced air condenser. Forced Air with a Muffin fan. A condenser designed to have A muffin fan attached to it. I was in heaven.
But I could not just have any Muffin Fan, and certainly VF did not research the most efficient quietest fan they could, surely they just slapped on whatever they could find for a good price in bulk right?
Anyway when the Fridge was delivered, first thing I did was take a Pic of the120mm fan so I could determine its specs. I found it was rated for about 72 CFM and had a .22 amp rating. and had a simple sleeve bearing. Intolerable!!!! ( to a muffin fan addict)
So I researched all I could, I found similar 'made in china' fridges with danfoss compressors came with 92 mm fans rated at 37 CFM.
I found This one Noctua Fan that moved ~53CFM, made less than half the Noise and consumed only 0.05amps!!
http://noctua.at/pdf/infosheets/noctua_nf_f12_focused_flow_web.pdf
Sold. At first I installed it in the same location as the provided fan, pulling air through the condenser, and it was not really much quieter in that location.
http://s557.photobucket.com/user/wrcsixeight/media/VFCoolingUnit_zpsfdc171ea.jpg.html?sort=3&o=171
For grins I placed it to push air through the condenser, and it got no Louder, So I relocated it to that side and made a cooling unit tunnel to force all the airflow through the condenser and shrouds so this single fan forced this air out my previously installed louvered vent in the conversion van window without any chance of being recycled through the condenser. My extra insulation allowed enough clearance to mount the fan in this orientation.
When All was said and done, the performance of the fridge increased. It got colder faster, used less electricity, made less noise, and expelled the heated air out the van body, all with the one fan which consumed les than half the electricity as the fan provided with the fridge.
And My Muffin fan Addiction felt justifiable.
The Fan provided with the fridge did not actually consume .22 amps, that was what it consumed when first spinning up. Running current was .12 amp, but still the Noctua consumed less than half of that.
What is neat is that this Noctua fan actually is capable of increasing the amount of air which passively gets pulled in through the open windows. On cooler nights when I do not power the intake fans by my head, and the fridge compressor kicks on, the slight breeze coming in through the window increases when the fridge runs. I love it.
One thing to note too is that I can close the window with the louvered vent behind the fridge. I took the electric motor and actuator from my conversion Van sofa bad and made it so it can open and close the window with a simple rocker switch. I do not want to drive in the rain or dusty roads with the window open. I also made another vent (closable) into my adjacent cabinet so that in winter time, the condenser warmed air is not expelled into the outside, but into the adjacent cabinet. In this cabinet, which houses my Electrical wall , I have another vent, with, you guessed it, another Muffin fan exhausting air from the compartment but into the passenger compartment, just behind the drivers seat.
This particular fan is the fan which came with my old Norcold Fridge. It was designed to be turned on when the back of the Norcold cooling unit exceeded 115F. I relocated it so that it ran 24/7 on that fridge. It is a 24v fan. It runs silently on 12.x volts. It has been running nearly continuously since late 2007.
So One might think with all these fans that A muffin fan addict might be satisfied. Hardly.
What I am working on now is a new intake system for my Sliding conversion van windows. Instead of Wood, I am using 1/4 inch plexiglass I've painted flat black. Instead of 3 120 MM fans I will use 2 120mm fans, and one 180mm fan. The plywood, even painted has been a bit susceptible to moisture.
http://www.amazon.com/SilverStone-p...ie=UTF8&qid=1401075875&sr=1-1&keywords=fm+181
Another Silverstone fan with a Speed controller. This fan on Slow speed moves 65 CFM for only 0.05 amps!! I cannot hear it on slow speed.
At full speed it draws over 1 amp and moves 150 + CFM.
I am a bit concerned how it will respond to the moisture it will have to deal with overnight, but I have to do it. No choice. I did paint it black too. I should have just spent the hour or 2 with a Sharpie as no doubt it is not balanced as good as it was before painting and might develop the tick that my Fm121 has.
Live and learn.
Now my Ceiling Exhaust is limited by the Silverstones max speed, and the resistance of the Nicro Mushroom vent. Well for grins one day I was seeing what the most powerful 120mm Fan is, and it turns out to be an abosolute Monster.
http://www.amazon.com/Delta-Electro...UTF8&qid=1401076510&sr=1-1&keywords=delta+fan
252 CFM and sounds like a Jet engine. No Speed control included, but I have my methods.
http://www.amazon.com/Converter-12V...m_sbs_e_4?ie=UTF8&refRID=04X9D8PM9FTJSDXGPVWR
This PWm controller can handle this fan , probably 2 of them if it had to.
This PWM controller operates at 25 khz. I have another one which is 15 khz and it make my tornado Fan whine annoyingly at slower speeds That one I use to Dim my LED night reading light. The 25khz PWm controller is inaudible to most humans ears, but will bother some pets no doubt.
I so fan have managed to refrain from purchasing the Delta Fan, but I don't know how much longer I can hold out.
Well to finish off this novel, most people with vans would be better off getting a Fantastik Fan and perhaps making a screened vent in the floor to allow cool air to replace what the fantastic fan sucks out the roof.
http://www.amazon.com/Fan-Tastic-Ve...&qid=1401077178&sr=8-1&keywords=fantastic+fan