Any thoughts on pros/cons of block ice vs cubes?
Any thoughts on pros/cons of block ice vs cubes?
Folks with these coolers:
Does the air get routed through the ice chest before being pulled through the radiator? My parts have arrived. Time to build.
Folks with these coolers:
Does the air get routed through the ice chest before being pulled through the radiator? My parts have arrived. Time to build.
Randy, yours is how I would ideally build mine. However,
I plan to save a lot of time by not having to fiberglass anything. That means a 3" blower pulling through the coil. You have the same amount of air flowing through your coil regardless of if it is pushed or pulled. Unless there is a baffle designed to collect the water I don't see what difference it makes. You are still relying on the airflow through the coil to be low enough that the condensed water falls down out of the coil and drains back into the cooler.
Instead of fiberglassing a duct to keep the air out of the cooler, i plan on cutting a 1" thick peice of foam to the shape of the cooler, to throw in on top of the ice/water. This will basically serve the same purpouse - keep the airflow from going over the ice.
If the return air vent is in one end of the lid and the coils are mounted on the other end, the return air is pre-cooled to some extent by passing over the ice and cold water in the box.
What I want to emerge from my outlet, is air that is both significantly cooler and significantly less humid than the muggy NC summer air. I don't know how much of a difference it makes, but I think that limiting the airflow over the ice/water and instead directing it right through the coil will aid in removing moisture from the air. Another benefit is that the foam will insulate the ice when the unit is off. Having the big return air vents on the top of the cooler kinda ruin its effectiveness for keeping ice.
Now that the gerbils are spinning I am also thinking that cooling air which is already at 80% relative humidity will bring it close to 100% anyway and it couldn't absorb any moisture from the water. If that's the case it wouldn't matter.
What I want to emerge from my outlet, is air that is both significantly cooler and significantly less humid than the muggy NC summer air. I don't know how much of a difference it makes, but I think that limiting the airflow over the ice/water and instead directing it right through the coil will aid in removing moisture from the air. Another benefit is that the foam will insulate the ice when the unit is off. Having the big return air vents on the top of the cooler kinda ruin its effectiveness for keeping ice.
Now that the gerbils are spinning I am also thinking that cooling air which is already at 80% relative humidity will bring it close to 100% anyway and it couldn't absorb any moisture from the water. If that's the case it wouldn't matter.
So here's a question - once you have taken off and climbed to altitude (and turned off the unit) are you better off draining the excess water, or keeping it? This of course assumes you have a way to drain it in flight.
It seems that the ice lasts longer when not in water, so to keep more cooling in reserve for when you land at the destination, I'm thinking draining might be better...?
I think the heat absorption by ice melting is much greater that the heat absorption by the cool water. So, logically you'd want to retain as much ice as possible.
I'm starting year three, ~50 trips so far. AFAICT, it doesn't really matter as long as I use block ice. A big piece always remains in the chest when I get home, so I put it in the fridge for use on another flight, then pump the water out.
What size block ice do you use? The 10 x 6 x 6 blocks found at convenience stores? How much can you fit in your cooler?