Seanshine said:
With all the facts i have gathered. I feel like this might actually work. Now the real question is how cold will the ice get? It seems like it would need a constant boil and freeze to get the temperature where it needs to be, like watters mentioned in his first post. Anyone know what i could use to recycle this condensed water back into the lines?
I hope you're not encouraged to continue by my response. I put it merely to say that water will freeze in a vacuum, not to say that this is a good idea for refrigeration. This thing had a massive vacuum pump and could well have been producing a decent continuous vacuum, not an intermittent half vacuum. (And using a decent chunk of mains power to do it.)
If I were going to build a refrigeration device, I think I'd look at what the HVAC engineers have developed over the past century+ and probably not use water as the refrigerant. (Since you've got it on board, how about petrol itself?)
And if you want to use the available resources, maybe you could simply use the cooling in the inlet manifold itself? As the air expands from atmospheric to the lower pressure of the inlet manifold, it cools. If you use a carburettor instead of the modern fuel injection, you will also get cooling from the evaporation of the fuel. I don't know how much "cold" you can get from this in a car, but aircraft (when they use carburetted IC engines) need to warm the inlet air to prevent icing in the carburettor.
Getting away from the speculative bits, you can look up the svp of water at different temperatures. Someone said the inlet manifold depression could be 25" Hg, which I think means a pressure of about 5" Hg or 17kPa. This is svp of water at about 55
oC. So once the temperature dropped below this you wouldn't get boiling, only increased evaporation. That will still produce cooling, but not nearly so much so quickly.
As for recycling the water, (BTW, where does the "condensed water" come from?) the usual practice is to compress it again, which makes it hot, then cooling this hot vapour into liquid (say by having wind blow over the pipes) and pump it back into the evaporator. This is where the pump scores over using manifold vacuum. It provides suction to the evaporator and compression to the condenser at the same time, making a nice closed loop arrangement. (Which reminds me, your water vapour was sucked into the engine and blown out of the exhaust, so you've got nothing left to condense.)