So I'm in the planning stages to modding out some kind of van or truck - well not even planning, more like still brainstorming. I'd like to throw one out I had earlier today and get some feedback. This is an idea best geared for medium sized spaces (cargo vans, SUV's) but I think could definitely be tweaked for a very small space such as a hatchback.
I've colored the instructions red to separate it from the rest of the post.
When I lived in the dorms in college, we had a trick for bypassing our window units if needed to get AC, or to just get out a little extra cold air.
You need a
fan with a grill/guard in front the blades, at least a 12"
2 buckets
Copper coil (example)
clear vinyl tubing
The idea is simple but pretty elegant. You place your first bucket up on your desk, and fill it with ice water. You put the fan next to the desk, then place the final bucket on the floor on the other side of the fan.
From there you create a Siphon system.
You take a small length of the vinyl tubing, and get it snug over one end of a length of copper coil. The other end of the vinyl goes in the ice water bucket that is placed up high. Take the copper tubing, wrap it in a spiral around the fan grill heading towards the middle of the guard, securing along the way with whatever you have at your disposal. Then take the last end of the copper tubing when you've made your spiral and have come off the fan guard, put another length of vinyl tube over it, and place that end in the empty bucket that is on the floor.
To start it, you would suck on the end of the vinyl tubing that was closest to the empty floor bucket until water came out - then you put it back in the empty bucket and let gravity continue the process! (no matter how you've run your conduit, as long as the empty bucket is below the reservoir ice bucket wherever it ends, the siphon works).
The copper gets cold almost immediately from the ice water that flows through. The fan now blows cold air. Dump the used water back into the reservoir bucket when the cycle finishes, add a little ice if you need to, and start it up again.
The water lasts longer than you'd think - you can manipulate the slope and path of the tube into the empty bucket such that you can slow the water down as it travels.
The problem to solve of course is, how do we ensure we have a constant supply of ice water when you're on the road and not near hookups or such? There are plenty of options. If worst comes to worst you buy a bag from a service station for your ice chest, and feed a small bit to the reservoir as you need it (pro tip, you can mod a small ice chest to be your reservoir and make the cold last longer). You can also collect the ice water that drains from your ice chest.
What I'd say is the most self sustaining solution is to buy a portable ice maker (such as this one) that has the feature of re filtering water from the reservoir. Power the ice maker from a car battery that is charged via solar/wind power by using an inverter. Run the water that drains out through the ice maker every once in a while so it gets filtered and add it back to the reservoir. If your reservoir is big enough, pipe diameter relatively small and you route the water in the most efficient way to slow the water, you can get a decent amount of time from one fill - definitely enough to fall asleep. The fans can take care of the rest of the time by circulating the air.
Thanks for reading and i appreciate any feedback, or comments on how the general idea can be adapted to specific circumstances.
I've colored the instructions red to separate it from the rest of the post.
When I lived in the dorms in college, we had a trick for bypassing our window units if needed to get AC, or to just get out a little extra cold air.
You need a
fan with a grill/guard in front the blades, at least a 12"
2 buckets
Copper coil (example)
clear vinyl tubing
The idea is simple but pretty elegant. You place your first bucket up on your desk, and fill it with ice water. You put the fan next to the desk, then place the final bucket on the floor on the other side of the fan.
From there you create a Siphon system.
You take a small length of the vinyl tubing, and get it snug over one end of a length of copper coil. The other end of the vinyl goes in the ice water bucket that is placed up high. Take the copper tubing, wrap it in a spiral around the fan grill heading towards the middle of the guard, securing along the way with whatever you have at your disposal. Then take the last end of the copper tubing when you've made your spiral and have come off the fan guard, put another length of vinyl tube over it, and place that end in the empty bucket that is on the floor.
To start it, you would suck on the end of the vinyl tubing that was closest to the empty floor bucket until water came out - then you put it back in the empty bucket and let gravity continue the process! (no matter how you've run your conduit, as long as the empty bucket is below the reservoir ice bucket wherever it ends, the siphon works).
The copper gets cold almost immediately from the ice water that flows through. The fan now blows cold air. Dump the used water back into the reservoir bucket when the cycle finishes, add a little ice if you need to, and start it up again.
The water lasts longer than you'd think - you can manipulate the slope and path of the tube into the empty bucket such that you can slow the water down as it travels.
The problem to solve of course is, how do we ensure we have a constant supply of ice water when you're on the road and not near hookups or such? There are plenty of options. If worst comes to worst you buy a bag from a service station for your ice chest, and feed a small bit to the reservoir as you need it (pro tip, you can mod a small ice chest to be your reservoir and make the cold last longer). You can also collect the ice water that drains from your ice chest.
What I'd say is the most self sustaining solution is to buy a portable ice maker (such as this one) that has the feature of re filtering water from the reservoir. Power the ice maker from a car battery that is charged via solar/wind power by using an inverter. Run the water that drains out through the ice maker every once in a while so it gets filtered and add it back to the reservoir. If your reservoir is big enough, pipe diameter relatively small and you route the water in the most efficient way to slow the water, you can get a decent amount of time from one fill - definitely enough to fall asleep. The fans can take care of the rest of the time by circulating the air.
Thanks for reading and i appreciate any feedback, or comments on how the general idea can be adapted to specific circumstances.