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Evaporative Air Conditioning


blackwrx

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and the motor is actually 100W smaller than the old motor and the air con is not cooling the house as well as what it used to.

I am looking at upgrading the motor if possible to a larger unit.

I would like to know if anyone here can offer any assistance, my air con has 5 outlets and if I upgrade the motor I would like to go upto an 800-850Watt unit, will this actually provide better cooling?

Can this be done? does anyone know how much extra air flow will be priveded by doing this? what sort of costs am I looking at?

Thanks

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  • No boost, no bottle, just my foot on the throttle!
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Evaprotive Aircons are C R A P

They rely on the cooling effect of water evaparation, so they will never be as cold as a propper aircon unit.

Rather than getting a bigger motor, save up for a real aircon as it will pump out cold air, not just slightly cooled air.

I used to have one and it made mold grow due to all the water it pumped into my living room.

Also a 100w smaller motor would not make much difference.

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  • Sucker
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Depends on your location though Zapper - if you live away from the coast they are usually better than refrigerative air conditioning. That's the extent of my knowledge though....

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anyone know the cost difference?

we too are looking into a/c for the home, and don't know whether evaporative or refrigerated is the way to go..

is there much difference in running costs?

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One of my mates is an Air con installer and service person. Recommends inverters most of the time. He has just upgraded the crap cheap air cons I had with some panasonic inverter split systems. They are som much quieter I can`t hear them operating outside and I am no pro energy ratings but the tag that came with it had 5 star rating on heating and cooling.

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  • Sucker
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is there much difference in running costs?

Substantial difference - evaporative systems are basically just a fan.

Like Krooked mention though, inverters are the way to go. Worth paying the bit extra for. :buttrock:

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As Tab says, depends on your location.

They are a lot cheaper to run and as long as the climate is not too humid (near the coast) they work quite well.

A bigger motor doesn't necessarily give you more air flow, it's the speed that governs that (and the size of the fan etc). Some motors have a few speeds, maybe yours is on low and can be wired up to medium or high.

If it's belt driven the pulley sizes can be changed to speed it up, you just have to make sure you don't overload the motor though.

As for it not cooling as well it could be a number of things.

Do any of the rooms get cooler than the others, if so it could be that the dampers in the duct (or ceiling register/grille) could be adjusted incorrectely, giving more air in one room than another. To adjust it properly you need an annemometer.

Is it a humid day? (give it a few days and then judge the performance)

Is the water pump working properly? Does it need bleeding?

Is the make up water turned on? (maybe it's running dry)

You don't want gale force winds coming out of the registers. Tape a streamer to the grille and see if it flaps around a bit? A nice gentle air flow will eventually make its way around the whole room.

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There are a few factors to take into consideration with evap AC. I know that reverse cycle is better and I agree that it will cool the house better and allow you to control the temp etc plus you can heat in winter too, but at a much higher cost.

Running costs are the big killer. A reverse cycle unit is about 10 times more expensive to run per hour on a similar size house. Our power bills over summer go up about $15/month and my folks go up about $200/month (much bigger house with r/c). Also for a 200srm house evap will cost around $3500-$4000 installed vs about $7000-$8000 for reverse cycle. Stay away from the cheap reverse cycle units.

Our place is 195sqm living and our unit is rated for a 220sqm house and with 8 outlets we never have it over 60% fan speed. Having high ceilings makes a huge difference as does good insulation. We have R3.5 bats and 32c ceilings throughout and people are amazed at how good our evap unit works, even on 40deg WA summer days. Our unit is Cool Breeze and it has not missed a beat.

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