My tanks are nice and cool but I'm not
My office is in the basement of my home and my 3 SW tanks are also in that same room..makes for an interesting place to chat on the phone ..over the sound of compressors and pumps and water flowing...
I can live with all that but the heat coming off the 2 chillers is way too much to deal with.
Before you ask..nope, no AC down here. I only have 1 window and I absolutely refuse to block it with an A/C unit..so that's not a possibility.
The smaller of the 2 chillers (1/10 for my 33g cube) vents into a closet that adjoins my office ('closet' is 8 x 12') and that one doesn't bother me muchas it doens't come on as often as the larger chiller. The closet also has 2 sets of louvered doors ..one is 3 x 6' , the other is 6 x 6'..so the heat does vent out of the closet.
It's the bigger chiller for my 120g that is causing the majority of the heat issues. It is a Pacific Coast CL650 1/4 HP unit. It does a great job keeping the tank at a steady 79 degrees but the heat coming off the back of the unit is a toasty 92 degrees...argh...add the high humidity level from all of the tanks and one tiny little window...I'm sure you get the picture...
One night I got into a discussion with Warren (Pecan2phat) about venting chillers and he gave me some really great info and some links. Thanks Warren!! :hug:...and the plan morphed into the following to suit the design of my home/chiller...
This isn't done yet..so bear with me please
Picked up these parts at Home Depot (of all places...)
and a bunch of 4" duct work...mostly rigid stuff and some flex dryer hose for the 1 bend I needed, and of course a dryer vent 'door' for the outside of the house (no pic on this yet, it was dark outside..lol)
This pic is a little weird as I'm not ready yet to move the chiller to it's new location below where the duct work comes into the house(this is under a counter in the corner of my office)...so a cardboard box of the same dimensions was used to configure the 'box' that will capture the heat from the chiller.
Clearly it's not quite finished yet...but it's getting there!
The top part was a vent designed for a chiminey or something and the edges were then bent down and more sheetmetal added so that it makes a snug fit around the (stand in) chiller. Obviously it needs more rivets but you get the idea :spin:
Kind of hard to tell from the picture but the 'box' is 10" x 16" and the hot air only has to go straight up the vent pipe about 5 feet before it is OUTSIDE (yippee!!!!!) of the house.
The inline duct fan pictured above moves 80 cubic feet of air per minute and hopefully that should be enough to keep the 'heat' of the chiller from popping it's own fuse
The other unit pictured above is a thermostadt that will be attached onto the 'box' and adjusted to turn on the fan as soon as the chiller starts generating heat higer than when it's simply 'on'.(I don't personally do electrical work, I stand back & watch )
I will be getting something appropriate to wrap the vent pipe in so I don't heat the room up further by default..and so far it looks like my current hoses will reach the new chiller location and therefore my current supply pump should also be similarly adequate. I do have a slightly stronger pump just in case...
I can't wait for it to finally be cooler in here again!
I'll post some better pics of the vent box when that cardboard box is removed and all the rivets are in place.
Thanks for looking !!
My office is in the basement of my home and my 3 SW tanks are also in that same room..makes for an interesting place to chat on the phone ..over the sound of compressors and pumps and water flowing...
I can live with all that but the heat coming off the 2 chillers is way too much to deal with.
Before you ask..nope, no AC down here. I only have 1 window and I absolutely refuse to block it with an A/C unit..so that's not a possibility.
The smaller of the 2 chillers (1/10 for my 33g cube) vents into a closet that adjoins my office ('closet' is 8 x 12') and that one doesn't bother me muchas it doens't come on as often as the larger chiller. The closet also has 2 sets of louvered doors ..one is 3 x 6' , the other is 6 x 6'..so the heat does vent out of the closet.
It's the bigger chiller for my 120g that is causing the majority of the heat issues. It is a Pacific Coast CL650 1/4 HP unit. It does a great job keeping the tank at a steady 79 degrees but the heat coming off the back of the unit is a toasty 92 degrees...argh...add the high humidity level from all of the tanks and one tiny little window...I'm sure you get the picture...
One night I got into a discussion with Warren (Pecan2phat) about venting chillers and he gave me some really great info and some links. Thanks Warren!! :hug:...and the plan morphed into the following to suit the design of my home/chiller...
This isn't done yet..so bear with me please
Picked up these parts at Home Depot (of all places...)
and a bunch of 4" duct work...mostly rigid stuff and some flex dryer hose for the 1 bend I needed, and of course a dryer vent 'door' for the outside of the house (no pic on this yet, it was dark outside..lol)
This pic is a little weird as I'm not ready yet to move the chiller to it's new location below where the duct work comes into the house(this is under a counter in the corner of my office)...so a cardboard box of the same dimensions was used to configure the 'box' that will capture the heat from the chiller.
Clearly it's not quite finished yet...but it's getting there!
The top part was a vent designed for a chiminey or something and the edges were then bent down and more sheetmetal added so that it makes a snug fit around the (stand in) chiller. Obviously it needs more rivets but you get the idea :spin:
Kind of hard to tell from the picture but the 'box' is 10" x 16" and the hot air only has to go straight up the vent pipe about 5 feet before it is OUTSIDE (yippee!!!!!) of the house.
The inline duct fan pictured above moves 80 cubic feet of air per minute and hopefully that should be enough to keep the 'heat' of the chiller from popping it's own fuse
The other unit pictured above is a thermostadt that will be attached onto the 'box' and adjusted to turn on the fan as soon as the chiller starts generating heat higer than when it's simply 'on'.(I don't personally do electrical work, I stand back & watch )
I will be getting something appropriate to wrap the vent pipe in so I don't heat the room up further by default..and so far it looks like my current hoses will reach the new chiller location and therefore my current supply pump should also be similarly adequate. I do have a slightly stronger pump just in case...
I can't wait for it to finally be cooler in here again!
I'll post some better pics of the vent box when that cardboard box is removed and all the rivets are in place.
Thanks for looking !!