temperature probe for DIY hillstream chiller?
Posted: Mon Nov 22, 2010 8:32 am
Cooling the hillstream river tank:
Right now I have a little woodstove fan on a lamp timer blowing down on the water surface, set to blow about half the time. I fiddle with the timing a bit depending on ambient temperature, but it does keep the hillstream river tank around the mid-70s with some fiddling and variation. This is to offset two 60w powerheads and bright lighting, which tends to heat the tank well above ambient air temp. Sometimes the system fails for various reasons, and we do get some swings, mostly on the high end.
The upsides of this are that it's cheap, and the fan on the water surface is probably great for oxygenation.
The downsides: It evaporates the tank, and also contributes to the humidity in the house. I'm worrying we're actually looking at moisture problems in the house with all these tanks.
Also, it's not designed to blow down (it's meant to blow the hot air near/above a woodstove around the room). The bearing is starting to complain a bit.
And also as I adjust for changing ambient conditions, I risk messing up and getting temperature swings.
I was thinking if I could get a temperature probe swtich, attached to a small submersible pump or powerhead, and attach that to tubing. In the winter the tubing could run along a long, cool shelf under a lot of windows (in Vermont). This would be cool for three seasons.
In the summer (or all year) the tube could go through the floor into an unheated (but somewhat insulated) crawlspace. It doesn't freeze down there anymore, and it certainly never gets warm in the summer.
Really the only thing stopping me right now is finding a suitable probe-switch. I've just spent some time I should have spent on other things with google and on fish-store sites, and I came up short.
Any ideas?
Right now I have a little woodstove fan on a lamp timer blowing down on the water surface, set to blow about half the time. I fiddle with the timing a bit depending on ambient temperature, but it does keep the hillstream river tank around the mid-70s with some fiddling and variation. This is to offset two 60w powerheads and bright lighting, which tends to heat the tank well above ambient air temp. Sometimes the system fails for various reasons, and we do get some swings, mostly on the high end.
The upsides of this are that it's cheap, and the fan on the water surface is probably great for oxygenation.
The downsides: It evaporates the tank, and also contributes to the humidity in the house. I'm worrying we're actually looking at moisture problems in the house with all these tanks.
Also, it's not designed to blow down (it's meant to blow the hot air near/above a woodstove around the room). The bearing is starting to complain a bit.
And also as I adjust for changing ambient conditions, I risk messing up and getting temperature swings.
I was thinking if I could get a temperature probe swtich, attached to a small submersible pump or powerhead, and attach that to tubing. In the winter the tubing could run along a long, cool shelf under a lot of windows (in Vermont). This would be cool for three seasons.
In the summer (or all year) the tube could go through the floor into an unheated (but somewhat insulated) crawlspace. It doesn't freeze down there anymore, and it certainly never gets warm in the summer.
Really the only thing stopping me right now is finding a suitable probe-switch. I've just spent some time I should have spent on other things with google and on fish-store sites, and I came up short.
Any ideas?