h a l f b a k e r yWhy on earth would you want that many gazelles anyway?
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
|
Won't there eventually be a buildup of condensation in the lowest part of the pipe? |
|
|
Yeah but it might be useful if you need to move a whole lot of water --- Jim wants to call it rain but I think thats stupid... |
|
|
the degree of water added to the air would be limited to the final humidity delivered to the building which would be the coldest and thus most saturated air in the system I would suspect that around 55% would be plenty cool. If you climate required cooler air then you need more underground pipe. The top of the L would have a cap and a wire mesh for rain and animals. |
|
|
So, the efficiency of the system is flawless and you'll never have liquid pooling at the lowest spot? |
|
|
Okay, I'll take two, but I'm gonna ask for one helluva warranty and service package. |
|
|
[+] You get an (almost) free flow of air into the building, for only the cost of the water, and of the electricity needed to pump the water to the top of the pipe. |
|
|
In humid weather, some of the water may condense as the air flows through the geothermal pipe -- if it does, this is a feature, since it decrease the amount of water expended to make the system operate. |
|
|
In very cold weather, the system won't work, since the water will inevitably be warmer than the air. |
|
|
My understanding of geothermal cooling is that it involves some sort of reservoir that can exchange heat with the earth; either air or water which is a heat sink for air. |
|
|
If you are adding vapor to make the air sink, does it sink down into the reservoir? And push air out? It seems to me that if the newly created vapor laden air is still warmer than air in the reservoir, it will not sink down into it. If it is cooler than what is in the reservoir, forget the reservoir and just cool with your vapor. |
|
|
Maybe home:temperature:cooling for category? |
|
| |