7000 sq ft warehouse

joe macclennan

Well-Known Member
To aircool the lights, where you get the air? If from inside you blast CO2 outside and your AC has to cool makeup air. if you get air from outside then it can't be too hot out and if it's too cool out your duct and hoods will condense water out of grow air makin it rain.
very true. I am thinking of putting in a water cooled heat exchanger on my outside air intake for summer. Especially when temps exceed 90. Use a thermostatically controlled solenoid for water flow.

50 degree intake air seems to be just about right. It cools several hoods in series very well without condensing on the hoods.
 

SnapsProvolone

Well-Known Member
Seeing that hvac will have to dehumidify, heat from lights is akin to energizing a heatstrip on an airhandler coil to prevent freezeups when dehuing only. Watts are watts, may as well get light from them. I say skip aircooling hoods.
 

joe macclennan

Well-Known Member
Seeing that hvac will have to dehumidify, heat from lights is akin to energizing a heatstrip on an airhandler coil to prevent freezeups when dehuing only. Watts are watts, may as well get light from them. I say skip aircooling hoods.

hmmm, well. Agree to disagree then. I've seen 7k of lights aircooled on a 250w 8" 750cfm fan very well.....even in the summer. Now there is maintenance keeping the glass clean and such. and on a grow of this scale.......
 

MisterBlah

Well-Known Member
very true. I am thinking of putting in a water cooled heat exchanger on my outside air intake for summer. Especially when temps exceed 90. Use a thermostatically controlled solenoid for water flow.

50 degree intake air seems to be just about right. It cools several hoods in series very well without condensing on the hoods.
And this is where it comes full circle though. You are still cooling the intake air.
 

SnapsProvolone

Well-Known Member
Thing is your not going to save a full 30 tons of aircon since the air has to come from somewhere. Losses in light via lens at 10% also factor it as well as added labor in bulb changes and glass cleaning, intake filter changes. Im saying keep the 10% of lumens and don't worry about the 30 tons of aircon, just pay the bill. ;)
 

MisterBlah

Well-Known Member
Thing is your not going to save a full 30 tons of aircon since the air has to come from somewhere. Losses in light via lens at 10% also factor it as well as added labor in bulb changes and glass cleaning, intake filter changes. Im saying keep the 10% of lumens and don't worry about the 30 tons of aircon, just pay the bill. ;)
This is my opinion as well.
 

joe macclennan

Well-Known Member
Thing is your not going to save a full 30 tons of aircon since the air has to come from somewhere. Losses in light via lens at 10% also factor it as well as added labor in bulb changes and glass cleaning, intake filter changes. Im saying keep the 10% of lumens and don't worry about the 30 tons of aircon, just pay the bill. ;)
and that's the other side of the coin for sure. i wouldn't want to be a glass cleaner every day
Not every location has that luxury. But yes, you are right, doesn't get much cheaper. Your heat exchanger will corrode at a much faster rate though.
very true


Just so you guys know I'm not putting these things forth as absolute truths. Just my take on things. I greatly value your opinions and am always open to other ideas
 

jaybray

Member
Seeing that hvac will have to dehumidify, heat from lights is akin to energizing a heatstrip on an airhandler coil to prevent freezeups when dehuing only. Watts are watts, may as well get light from them. I say skip aircooling hoods.
I am going to go with vertical 48'' parabolic if I don't get gravitas. Correct me if I am wrong but that is what you were recommending.
 
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