Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeff9
So maybe an alternative would be to chill the water using a peltier or something.
Would growing cooler orchids be viable if you apply cold water to the roots? The cold water circulation would eventually chill the air aswell if i am correct.
I am talking about chilling the water to 10-14c and circulating it with a pump and running air through the tank with a fan.
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I have done an "indirect" cooler with cold water and air blowing over the water to cool the air. It does work. I need to cool from 85-105F to below 85F. This works with water at 60F running over a slab of rock as a sheet, and a computer fan blowing over it. The variables to consider are:
- desired air temperature
- outside/room temperature
- from that temperature differential
- how much heat input goes in (specifically from lights).
- Area of water to air volume of tank.
- Surface area of tank (determines over how much area the heat comes into the tank: sphere would be ideal, long skinny the worst).
To give you some idea, I use a 1/15HP aquarium chiller, and it runs 50% of the time at 95F, so has about 50% reserves. The tank is 90 gal volume, on the long and skinny side 63x24x14", the water surface is about 14x18". Heat input is 160 to 320 W of T5s.
I would not chill the roots, unless you grow siberian orchids acclimated to permafrost, or alpine species.