Spyke
lemmy.ml

They work great if it's not humid out. Like in AZ right up until the monsoon hits, you can keep a house in the low 70s with swamp cooling* even when it's 100 outside, but once humidity jumps up to 30-40%, suddenly it's 80+ inside…

* Mind you, that is a full sized roof unit.

16

That's the problem with NY... It may not get to 100° all the time, but it regularly stays 90°+ and it is ALWAYS 45%rh or more...

Working in an open air factory in NY summers is brutally suffocating...

9

Humidity is 60-80% here today. At least there is a little bit of wind right now.

4
sopuli.xyz

mmm mould spores. I live in the UK where its way too humid to consider trying this inside. Pumping water through silicone pipes around my legs and a reservoir with an ice bottle in it did an alright job to help cool off after exercise though. Not sure how sustainable it would be to run long term, think I need another source of cool.

I have wondered how cool the ground is if you dug down 50cm or so and put the pipes there to cool down. But at that point I would be using a huge amount of pipes to get it anywhere with no idea if it would even work very well.

3
rapcheereply
lemmy.world

I have wondered how cool the ground is if you dug down 50cm or so and put the pipes there to cool down.

i believe a few meters down it's a constant 10-15 °C, they do use it in "ground heat exchangers", cool in the summer, warmer in the winter

2

A few meters down is a lot to dig with a spade compared to 50cm which is still quite a bit of digging really.

I do wonder what kind of temperature the water in a pond would be and if I could use that to dump heat into from my house.

3

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THE SWAMP COOLER OF COLDNESS - diy usb aircon tutorial | Spyke