Building a portable AC for my car

In summary, there is a project involving a cooler, ice and water, computer fans and a radiator to be powered by a car's cigarette lighter. The 12V water pump and 120mm fans need to be wired in parallel and a resistor can be added to slow down the pump if needed. There is a suggestion to use a heat exchanger instead of the computer radiator. A fuse is necessary for the system and the size and design of the radiator is questioned. The goal is to cool the car with 3 gallons of ice water but the effectiveness may depend on the car's initial heat content. The size and cooling capability of the radiator is also discussed.
  • #71
IMG_20160714_172458.jpg
IMG_20160714_175516.jpg
IMG_20160714_175550.jpg
IMG_20160714_175604.jpg
Update: I got one fan working again! Somehow the blade part of the fan came loose so I popped it back onto the motor. Weird...I hoped that would be the same issue for the other fan but it is attached just fine. It does not work and I can't figure out why.
 
Last edited:
Engineering news on Phys.org
  • #72
Update***: swapped out bad fan for a different one. Both are now working on the circuit. Have yet to include any diode etc. Will see if it kills another fan, if it does then I definitely know something is wrong. Also, water pump is rated 13.6v at 3 amps DC. So far so good. Will let you know results tomorrow or next day. I'm tired haha
IMG_20160714_210723.jpg
IMG_20160714_210734.jpg
 
  • #73
@iduhfuse In your post #71, image three, (https://www.physicsforums.com/attachments/img_20160714_175550-jpg.103235/) there is an IC shown mounted at the right side of the circuit board. What are the markings on the IC? Also markings on any other ICs on the board?

EDIT: For testing purposes, can you connect to a 12Volt supply other than your vehicle? This will separate vehicle system issues from any device issues.
 
  • #74
Tom.G said:
@iduhfuse In your post #71, image three, (https://www.physicsforums.com/attachments/img_20160714_175550-jpg.103235/) there is an IC shown mounted at the right side of the circuit board. What are the markings on the IC? Also markings on any other ICs on the board?

EDIT: For testing purposes, can you connect to a 12Volt supply other than your vehicle? This will separate vehicle system issues from any device issues.
Only one IC. Will look at it tonight. I have a 12V adapter that outputs 1.4 amps. Not enough for the system but enough to test each fan. So far everything is working good. Except for the one fan that died :( I doubt they're going to give me a replacement because I cut the 3 pin connector off
 
  • #75
VERDICT*** Okay, I apologize for the long wait. Things got extremely busy for me so I had to put off time on this project.

So far, did some testing today with 8lbs of ice in the cooler.(cubes). Started at 105f and dropped to about 95f in the course of 15-20mins. However, it would not go any lower for the next hour :((( I have a feeling the fans are not pushing enough air past the radiator to extract the negative heat from the ice water. What I will do next is get a powerful single slim fan that will be placed on the opposite end of the cooler top and blow air inside and hopefully air will blast out from the radiator. The two fans on the rad will be eliminated. Can anyone see this as a bad idea/upgrade?
 
  • #76
Will probably work better that way, if you can keep the cover on the cooler when it is pressurized. The important fan characteristics are CFM vs Back Pressure, usually shown as a graph on their data sheet. You can measure the pressure difference of your present setup with a homemade water differential pressure gauge like this one. Made of clear plastic tubing with water in it. Stick one end in your Cooler box and the other end exposed to free air. It's convenient beacuse fan back pressure is measured in inches of water.

U-Press-Gauge.jpg
 
  • #77
What part of the world are you in?
Does weather lady tell you the dewpoint?
Air cools easily down to the dewpoint but to get below that you have to remove the water vapor, which is steam.
Condensing steam takes roughly 1000 BTU's per pound compared to air's 0.24 BTU's per pound per degree.
Melting ice takes 144 BTU per pound.
So to condense a pint of water vapor out of humid air melts ##\frac{1000}{144}## = ~7 pints of ice.
That's why car airconditioners are so big. Where i live they leave a puddle of water in the parking lot.

Do you have any leaks in your car that soak the carpet ?
 
  • #78
jim hardy said:
What part of the world are you in?
Does weather lady tell you the dewpoint?
Air cools easily down to the dewpoint but to get below that you have to remove the water vapor, which is steam.
Condensing steam takes roughly 1000 BTU's per pound compared to air's 0.24 BTU's per pound per degree.
Melting ice takes 144 BTU per pound.
So to condense a pint of water vapor out of humid air melts ##\frac{1000}{144}## = ~7 pints of ice.
That's why car airconditioners are so big. Where i live they leave a puddle of water in the parking lot.

Do you have any leaks in your car that soak the carpet ?
I live in Toronto, Canada. So yeah weather probably does state dewpoint most likely. Humidity RH was 36% in the car. And no zero leaks
 
  • #79
iduhfuse said:
Humidity RH was 36% in the car.

Toronto ! wow...

I typed 95 F and 36% into this
http://andrew.rsmas.miami.edu/bmcnoldy/Humidity.html
and got dewpoint 64 degF
The air coming out of your radiator probably will only creep below that as the car dehydrates . Fortunately you're not having to dry outside air.

Fun project, keep us posted ?
 
  • #80
14071729?wid=450&hei=450&fmt=pjpeg.jpg


I have one of these things, and I'm pleased with the cooling I get on very hot days. I point it right at my face, or the back of my neck.

$8.99 retail. You should be able to convert it to the car's 12 VDC easily, both fan and squirter. One per passenger.
 
  • Like
Likes OmCheeto
  • #81
anorlunda said:
14071729?wid=450&hei=450&fmt=pjpeg.jpg


I have one of these things, and I'm pleased with the cooling I get on very hot days. I point it right at my face, or the back of my neck.

$8.99 retail. You should be able to convert it to the car's 12 VDC easily, both fan and squirter. One per passenger.
I tried this. My car fan on full blast and a sprayer squirter right in front of the vents with cold ice water. It def works but my shirt and face get soaked lol
 
  • #82
iduhfuse said:
I have a feeling the fans are not pushing enough air past the radiator to extract the negative heat from the ice water.
There will be a hard limit to the rate at which you can get heat into the surface of the iced water if you are just interfacing at the top. You need a good heat exchanger with a big surface area (like the real thing has) and good circulation of water around the melting ice. Have you measured the temperature on the surface of the (stationary?) water in the cooler? If it is not higher than 0°C then you can conclude that not much heat is being transferred in the way you wanted.

anorlunda said:
14071729?wid=450&hei=450&fmt=pjpeg.jpg


I have one of these things, and I'm pleased with the cooling I get on very hot days. I point it right at my face, or the back of my neck.

$8.99 retail. You should be able to convert it to the car's 12 VDC easily, both fan and squirter. One per passenger.
Looks like the same principle as a Swamp Cooler but very localised.
 
  • #83
sophiecentaur said:
There will be a hard limit to the rate at which you can get heat into the surface of the iced water if you are just interfacing at the top. You need a good heat exchanger with a big surface area (like the real thing has) and good circulation of water around the melting ice. Have you measured the temperature on the surface of the (stationary?) water in the cooler? If it is not higher than 0°C then you can conclude that not much heat is being transferred in the way you wanted.Looks like the same principle as a Swamp Cooler but very localised.
Measured the temp of the water after its been running right? I haven't yet.

Update*** did another test today with 12lbs of ice...little change :( surface of water was roughly 6C
 
Last edited:
  • #84
iduhfuse said:
Measured the temp of the water after its been running right? I haven't yet.

Update*** did another test today with 12lbs of ice...little change :( surface of water was roughly 6C
?

How did you measure that?
From what I can tell, our systems are nearly identical. (by a factor of 2, for each variable. Which, in the context of this experiment, makes them nearly identical. :oldtongue:)

From my July 6 experiment, I was pumping 3 gallons per minute, from a reservoir of 3 gallons. I seriously doubt there was a measurable temperature differential, anywhere in the cooler. (Though, I dumped my ice out of it's bag, into the cooler, and you seem to have complicated things)
I also measured a differential air temperature of 6.5°F, into and out of the radiator.
Given the mass flow rates:
water: 0.194 kg/sec
air: 0.0185 kg/sec​
I would recommend figuring out the change in temperature of the water through the radiator.

ps. I would share more of my data, thoughts, and discoveries, but I'm already 3 hours late for an appointment. :devil:
 
  • #85
OmCheeto said:
?

How did you measure that?
From what I can tell, our systems are nearly identical. (by a factor of 2, for each variable. Which, in the context of this experiment, makes them nearly identical. :oldtongue:)

From my July 6 experiment, I was pumping 3 gallons per minute, from a reservoir of 3 gallons. I seriously doubt there was a measurable temperature differential, anywhere in the cooler. (Though, I dumped my ice out of it's bag, into the cooler, and you seem to have complicated things)
I also measured a differential air temperature of 6.5°F, into and out of the radiator.
Given the mass flow rates:
water: 0.194 kg/sec
air: 0.0185 kg/sec​
I would recommend figuring out the change in temperature of the water through the radiator.

ps. I would share more of my data, thoughts, and discoveries, but I'm already 3 hours late for an appointment. :devil:
I measured temp using an infrared heat gun. Shoots a laser...I've basically concluded this little experiment is a bust. It was fun, $120 sort of wasted (I can use parts for other things) but otherwise this AC cooler is not effective at all. Guess just have to deal with the heat or either pump that water through a vest...which is tempting
 
  • #86
iduhfuse said:
I tried this. My car fan on full blast and a sprayer squirter right in front of the vents with cold ice water. It def works but my shirt and face get soaked lol

Using the hand-held one, I squirt only when feeling hot and dry. Don't squirt again until the previous water has evaporated. In other words, squirting water must be manually controlled by the person depending on what he feels on his skin.

Here's similar idea that's very easy to manage and that has become popular in recent years because the towels are marketed in garden stores. Wet it, wrap around your neck, then don't wet again until dry.
396_602_B_IU_Towel_Behind_Neck_Looking_Down__92711.1404239477.1280.1280.jpg

I tend to favor KISS principle solutions. Most of the things discussed on this thread are far from KISS.
 
  • #87
iduhfuse said:
I measured temp using an infrared heat gun. Shoots a laser...I've basically concluded this little experiment is a bust. It was fun, $120 sort of wasted (I can use parts for other things) but otherwise this AC cooler is not effective at all. Guess just have to deal with the heat or either pump that water through a vest...which is tempting

I disagree, that the experiment is "a bust".
It only becomes a bust, when the theory is disproven.
You've shared WAY too little data to prove the theory is wrong.

You may not be back, to continue the experiment, but I will...

Lukedafuse; "I'm not afraid to do this experiment!"
Yomda; "You will be..."
Lukedafuse; "The experiment failed! Ahhhhhh!"
Yomda; "That's because, you do no understand the power of the f=ma equation, and have not even delved into the m.dot Q delta.t equations yet..."​
 
  • #88
OmCheeto said:
I disagree, that the experiment is "a bust".
It only becomes a bust, when the theory is disproven.
You've shared WAY too little data to prove the theory is wrong.

You may not be back, to continue the experiment, but I will...

Lukedafuse; "I'm not afraid to do this experiment!"
Yomda; "You will be..."
Lukedafuse; "The experiment failed! Ahhhhhh!"
Yomda; "That's because, you do no understand the power of the f=ma equation, and have not even delved into the m.dot Q delta.t equations yet..."​
I don't know what other data to provide. Even without doing quantitative data analysis it's pretty simple to tell "omg. It's ******* hot!" ...and then proceed to roll all windows down and get a blast of fresh cool air lol. All jokes aside...I already know my bottleneck. My heat exchanger is way to small and fans are not powerful enough (also need more of them). If I could get a heat exchanger to cover the entire lid of the cooler with maybe 9 fans running then yes it would probably make 20-30f difference instead of only 5-10f difference. However, heat exchangers are expensive and I don't plan on spending any more on the project other than maybe using an old life jacket and running water lines through it to cool me
 

Similar threads

  • Electrical Engineering
2
Replies
68
Views
14K
  • DIY Projects
Replies
6
Views
1K
  • Engineering and Comp Sci Homework Help
Replies
13
Views
2K
Replies
14
Views
80K
  • Electrical Engineering
Replies
29
Views
18K
Replies
10
Views
4K
  • Electrical Engineering
Replies
16
Views
14K
Replies
16
Views
2K
  • Electrical Engineering
Replies
1
Views
3K
  • Electrical Engineering
Replies
7
Views
65K
Back
Top