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While vacationing as a youngster with my parents in East Texas in July, I still remember my grandmother adding ice cubes in the afternoons to her two swamp cooler water trays. Her house was built in the early 1920's or so and had no central AC or window AC units.
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Even Los Angeles gets humid enough to where the de-humidifier function is half the battle won. In the rest of the non-desert parts of the country, it’s more than half. |
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The genius service director bought 4 giant versions of these to cool the bays down in 2007. I looked at one realized it was a swamp / fan. I went to him and said " You know those things put MORE moisture into the air right? Why do you think it's so bad here when it's in the 80's / 90's? Because we're in Virginia and it's always humid!"
Dumd @ss..... |
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I don't understand how any intelligent person can fall for that nonsense.
You cannot get heat out of a room with a shoebox sized device AND NOTHING TO MOVE THE HEAT OUT OF THE ROOM. |
Monoblock airco's with dryer hose work for small rooms
But as they blow hot air out they cause low pressure in the house.. which means you will suck exterior air in the house through various gaps in the insulation/shell of the room&house. They don't work well for big rooms/houses on really hot days |
My gf's friend bought two of those. One for him, and one for her. I looked at it and there is a pullout tray that you soak in water then leave in the freezer. It looks like it is made of air filter material. Then there is a well that you have to put water in. I told her it is like sticking a block of ice in front of a fan. I don't think she has used it.
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The unit is the size of a railroad car on the trailer of a semi and it had a hose about 3' in diameter that blew the cold air into the school. The hose was pretty long. The hot air and condensation from the A/C unit just emptied out the other side of the condenser on the truck. Pretty impressive...it really cooled and dehumidified the huge auditorium full people. |
Swamp coolers are how we cooled our greenhouses when I was a grower in the indoor foliage industry.
One end of the greenhouse consisted of a porous fiber with water cascading down it and the other end a series of large fans that sucked air flow through the wet air end. They did a fantastic job to keep things cool. http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1593694872.jpg |
That was back in the 70's. They now have advanced materials like cellulose products that are more efficient.....
https://image.made-in-china.com/2f0j...d-for-Sale.jpg |
Friend of mine in HS had a dad that was into orchids. Had the largest non-commercial greenhouse in the state. He used misters and fans to keep it cool in there, like 20-30 degrees cooler than ambient temps
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Well you can cool things with water & sun But that won't work indoors. |
https://www.thenational.ae/uae/environment/old-wind-towers-the-new-cooling-system-1.503775
Traditional cooling. Drape wet muslin at the top of the tower and let it cool the air therefore dropping it down into the dwelling. |
I'm going to say no, it probably doesn't woork. Looks similar to the ZeroBreeze that was debunked by Thunderf00t a little while ago.
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