fungia":ht4yv2ik said:thank you guys. outside temperature here can dip below freezing. i notice my chiller comes on even during winter because of the lights and pumps. im thinking that i can plumb some tubing outside to let the outside cold air cool my tank naturally during winter, like the dorm refrigerator diy idea but on a bigger scale. do you think this is a realistic idea?
Not necessarily, some break off of glaciers and somebreak off of the polar caps. I would bet a large percentage of the glaciers and acrtic snow packs are formed from simple snow fall. It snows quite a bit in the arctic. I have seen ships get iced down in Alaska in a matter of hours and have seen the ice pack get a couple hundred miles larger in a week during severe Arctic storms. Most of the Ice I have seen form up there is from freezing spray that the wind picks up off the tops of waves. I can't tell you weather it was salt water or pure water as I did not make a habit of licking icebergs, or the ship I was on for that matter. Come to think of it. I'd bet the pure H2O icebergs are strictly from glaciersGuy":2nr8zkaf said:I thought icebergs were born from glaciers.
But wouldn't you have to take the time to make the salty ice water? :? Or do you just mean mix salt into water with lots of ice cubes in it and then soak the beers in it?JustPhish":cq2m64xa said:Can't believe no one mentioned the myth busters yet. When you want to chill a six pack of beers very quickly, soak them in salty ice water. Works amazingly fast!
blackcloudmedia":pdvziisi said:Also that calculator is using Sodium CHloride as a test solution, the salt we use has a LOT of other salts, i.e. magnesium chloride