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$1.00 Room Air Conditioner (for da poor man)

$1.00 Room Air Conditioner (for da poor man)
My first Instrutable ...

About 15 years ago I was laid-off from work and money got real tight. It was during the hottest part of the Summer ( the hottest summer of the century LOL). I needed away to stay cool at night so I could be well rested and ready to look for new work the next day.
I had reached into the freezer for a soda I wanted ice cold, it had froze solid. I sat it on the counter to thaw and came back later to find it half frozen and found a puddle of water dripping onto the floor from the condensation. Then it dawned on me that's exactly the way an air conditioning unit works...


 
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Step 1BOM

Please be careful using hand tools. Im not the dumbest person in the world. I use hand tools everyday of my life. But I always keep safety in mind and know that things happen, and try to be best prepared. Remembering such things as don't cut something with the sharp bladed pointing toward you.  If you don't know how to use basic hand tools, please ask someone for help.

BOM (Bill of Materials)

4 2 liter soda bottles (with caps)
1 Cooking sheet
1 Box Fan
1 Box

Tools

Razor Knife
Duct Tape (one of mans greats contributions)
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27 comments
Jul 18, 2011. 4:22 AMtech53 says:
More importantly a refrigerator/freezer puts the heat back into your house doesn't it? I could see this as being great for cooling a room that gets warmer than the rest of the house, or maybe if you went camping something like this being really awesome, but would it really work for cooling a house? You would have to put the heat exchanging surface of your fridge near a window wouldn't you?
Jul 18, 2010. 8:38 AMnadeem5476 says:
that will make your room full of humidity and thats why it is a fail idea
Jul 20, 2010. 1:20 AMnadeem5476 says:
it will just fill a lot of humidity in the room , and u willnot b able to take breath in tht atmosphere dear ! thts y its a failed idea.
Jul 20, 2010. 11:56 PMnadeem5476 says:
thanks for the clarification , but does this mean that this thing and freon gas a/c works same ? if there is ample amount of chilled water i m using as a freon gas , without compressor (but just using a pump to pmp the chilled water in the lines of the condenser ? ) ?
Jul 21, 2010. 1:05 PMgazoutg says:
If you don't use a compressor the freon won't get hot outside and cold inside. If your freon pipes don't get cold they will not make the humidity condensate on them and nothing will happen For more infos : http://home.howstuffworks.com/refrigerator2.htm
Jul 21, 2010. 10:39 PMnadeem5476 says:
@ gazoutg yes dear i know , i was asking that using freon OR a chilled water (AS A REFRIGERANT) means the same , i know the FREON requires a compressor to compress and chilled water only needs a pump to pump into lines . any how thanks.,
Jul 21, 2010. 7:10 AMfarzadbayan says:
Nice and practical
May 8, 2010. 1:11 PMjimmerforpoy says:
Could you put all that in a mini freezer and have it go all the time without the bottles melting?
May 18, 2010. 5:31 PMgazoutg says:
I'm not an expert.
But from what i understand of compresser cooler (like fridges) and Peltier unit (used in portable electric cooler):
 - they dont "make" cool air they remove the heat (energy) from inside the box and expulse it outside (for example the air behind a fridge is hotter)

That mean your improvised AC will throw out cool air but your fridge will compensate by heating the room.
Jul 17, 2010. 11:37 AMWin7Maniac says:
True. To understand how AC units work, you have to remember the connection between heat and pressure. When pressure increases, heat rises, when it decreases it gets colder, and vice versa. The compressor (which is almost always outside) COMPRESSES the compressant, usually freon, which is then sent through copper tubing to the a-coil inside the furnace, under the blower. The a-coil allows the compressed freon to uncompress, lowering the air temperature in the chamber, which is then sent back up through the vents. Then the freon goes back up for recompression outside. The compressor is outside, with a fan, so that the heat from compression will be left outside, not inside. If you feel some spots on the outside of most freezers/refrigerators, you can feel it is hot. Again, the compression.
May 1, 2010. 8:05 PMpopa27272 says:
my uncle used to do the same thing with a block of ice from the store and one of those cheap metal tins and it seemed to work fine without a box around it
Feb 2, 2010. 3:01 PMlemonie says:
Can you add photographs?
If you could have the hot part of the fridge outside and leave the door open you'd be there maybe.

L:
Feb 3, 2010. 6:25 PMtristan993 says:
this is great, but you're not getting rid of the hot air in ur room. ur only adding cooler, dryer air. i would have a tube-like construction with a fan sucking in the hot air from the room and another blowing the air, cooled by the bottles, back out.

is the temp of the cold air inversely proportional to the temp of the hot air?

Feb 3, 2010. 1:16 PMIdahoDavid says:
Actually your freezer works more efficiently if it is kept full. By keeping sets of bottles in there freezing you are wasting less energy. This is a very simple alternative to working with a lot of pipes and pumps to circulate water in front of a fan. It is also well within the technical skills of a lot of people. This is definitely worth trying for small-space cooling and in areas like the Pacific Northwest where the number of overwhelmingly hot days and nights doesn't justify investing in an actual air condioner. Well done.
Feb 3, 2010. 9:30 AMmeddler says:
I kind of made the same thing for my wife when I was stationed at Fort Riley in the ARMY. She was pregnant with our first child and the hot Kansas summer was killing her. What I did was place a couple of milk jugs filled with water in a chest freezer to freeze. Then I cut the bottom out of a 5 gallon bucket I found along the road, put the milk jug inside the bucket and placed a fan behind it. Worked pretty well as I recall. It inspired my cooler ible I made from an old camp cooler.
Feb 1, 2010. 8:03 PMsjonahm16 says:
He probably uses his freezer to store other things so he didn't think it necessary to add the price of freezing them. Great idea! I like this diy air condition a lot better than others cause the soda bottles are much easier to reuse than ones that involve ice water. Thanks for the idea.
Feb 1, 2010. 7:14 PMsonicdrive says:
good idea but what do you spend in electric turning the bottle of water to ice fridges are not the cheapest thing to freeze water

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Author:Blofish
Just like to make my own stuff and show others how to live better cheaply