Portable air conditioner - looks interesting

Apr 25, 2024
660
Fuji 32 Bellingham
Yeah, you know, evaporative coolers get a lot of hate as not being true "air conditioners". Since they do not blow ice-cold air, people think they don't work. But, this misses the point. They are an energy-efficient way to reduce the ambient temperature, and they do this very well, with some caveats, as long as you understand how they actually work. Unlike an AC unit, you can't just turn it on and expect it to work.

First, the lower the relative humidity, the better they work. I lived in on-post housing for a while in Arizona, and that is how those houses were cooled. They did not chill the house, but they brought the temperature from completely unbearable to just bearable. So, when considering one of these for use on a boat, most of us live in areas where the RH stays fairly high, reducing the benefit (but not negating it). But ...

Unlike an AC system, a properly-functioning evaporative system brings air in from outside, cools it, and forces air out of the space at some other location (like a cracked window). This is because the cooled air is also more humid (due to the evaporation). It doesn't take long before the air is pretty saturated and then the unit cannot cool at all. Portable units (like the Lowes unit) fail in this regard because they just recirculate indoor air. In areas with very low humidity, this can actually be fine for a little bit - cooling the space down - but as humidity climbs, the unit stops cooling and the space eventually heats up ... on top of the humidity ... and actually makes it worse than before.

So, the issue is not a failure to eject warm air (as it would with an AC unit). The failure is in not bringing in outside air. This misunderstanding is why most people do not get satisfactory results. If it is hot outside, it seems counterintuitive that you would want to bring that air inside. But, an evaporative cooler cannot work for long, if you don't.

And, if a unit does bring in and cool outside air, then the other failure is typically the fault of the user - in not creating a good place for the indoor air to exhaust. That is the other thing about evaporative coolers. You want to vent indoor air at some point as far from the fan as possible. This creates a flow. Warmer, lower-humidity air is drawn in, increasing pressure inside. This air is cooled and its humidity raised. We want to draw that air through the space and eject it. Any space that does not have this air flowing through it will not be cooled.

Which brings us to one more point that most people don't fully appreciate. Intuition dictates that the longer you run your cooler, the cooler the space should be - like it is when you run an AC. But, that's not how these work. The cooling only lasts as long as the unit is running - pretty much the same as a fan. You shut if off, stop the air flow, and the cooling stops immediately. Running it longer does not cool it down more. The only thing that brings the temperature down is if you increase the air flow or the RH drops.

Fortunately, nature has provided portable evaporative cooling that is actually more efficient. When you move air over your skin, as we all know, the evaporation of sweat cools us. All a swamp cooler does is outsources this cooling so that we get the same amount of cooling, but with decreased airflow directly over our skin. In other words, we could get the same amount of cooling by sitting in front of a fan. But, a swamp cooler allows us to put that cooling process somewhere else (in the cooling unit) and just get the cooled air.

Of course, the problem with these inexpensive portable units is that, as mentioned above, they increase the RH so, although they initially cool the air, they also decrease the effectiveness of sweating. So, we sweat more and the humidity continues to climb.

All this to say that an evaporative cooler CAN work, even on a boat, but these portable units require some modification. All you would need to do is duct air into the unit (rather than taking ambient cabin air). Then, if you position yourself between the unit and a port or hatch that is cracked open (to allow exhaust), the unit WILL make you cooler than if you didn't have it, unless RH is quite high.
 
Sep 24, 2018
3,599
Catalina 30 MKIII Chicago
Extra humidity on boats in the heat doesn't sound like a great idea. I'm sure it can be done but it sounds like a lot of hassle for minimal gain
 
May 24, 2004
7,190
CC 30 South Florida
Evaporative coolers do not work in high humidity locations. They just cool the air by evaporation and evaporation is very slow when the air is already saturated. Out in the Desert South West swamp coolers are popular but they have to leave windows or a door open to circulate the humid air out and bring in new dry air. Peltier Effect coolers are power hungry in excess of what a 12V compressor would demand. I was checking on these portable units and they do separate the compressor cooling and condensation side from the cold air recirculation side, but they do it with hoses which requires the cold air to leave the space into an the warm hose area. The largest draw back I see is that the intake and outtake hoses are real close together which means the cold air coming out of one hose is easily sucked in by the other which can fool the thermostat to think the space has already reached the desired temperature when the opposite side of the space may still be quite warm. My other concern is the battery aboard the boat; fire is gravest danger aboard a boat and any malfunction in recharging these batteries carry a high risk of fire. My unit of choice would be a a 120V compressor driven 6K BTU that sits on a cabin top hatch and driven by a Honda 2000 generator.
 
Sep 24, 2018
3,599
Catalina 30 MKIII Chicago
I wonder if a liquid to air heat exchanger with raw water pumped through it would take the edge off. This assumes that the raw water is cooler than the air temp
 
Apr 25, 2024
660
Fuji 32 Bellingham
To frame this, properly used, a good evaporative cooler, at 60% RH and 80 degrees F, you could expect about a 10 degree F drop in the air that the unit is blowing. That doesn't mean that your space is cooled 10 degrees, just that the air blowing directly out of the unit is 10 deg cooler than the air coming into it. Since this 10 deg drop adds moisture, in this example, the cooled air is also at about 98% RH.

So, that is a good benchmark environment (80 deg F at 60% RH). If the RH is lower, it might yield results that actually improve comfort. Higher, and it certainly won't. If the outside temperature is higher, the cooling effect improves slightly (up to around 12 deg F drop at like 110 F), but not much.

At 80 F and 40% RH, the cooling effect can increase (about a 15 F drop). And, this only brings the cooled air up to about 92% RH. That will definitely feel cooler, especially when combined with the moving air.

Anyway, those numbers might help to frame about what kind of performance is possible. In a marine environment, the numbers are not impressive, but some people might sail in conditions where this might be of some benefit.

Really though, most folks would get better performance with a fan, leveraging the cooling of evaporated sweat, provided air is moved through the cabin and not just blown around in the cabin.
 
Apr 25, 2024
660
Fuji 32 Bellingham
I wonder if a liquid to air heat exchanger with raw water pumped through it would take the edge off. This assumes that the raw water is cooler than the air temp
The short answer is yes. I prototyped just such a system several years ago. The key advantage is that it also REMOVES moisture from the air, as water vapor condenses on the coil. That sounds like a win-win, but the way the physics works out, it only brings the RH down to a point and the air can never be cooled down quite to the temperature of the sea water.

The trick is getting a large enough coil and big enough fan to cool enough air fast enough to offset the effect of the sun striking the deck and warming the cabin back up. We have relatively cool water, here, but I still estimated this to be impractical except as a system to run when the sun was not directly hitting the cabin. So, it could be a solution for locations where the night temperature is still unbearable to sleep. Since this solution works better with recirculated air, you could actually cool the cabin at night with a fairly quiet fan.

I gave up on it because the prototype was interesting but not impressive. And, the math/physics doesn't ever lean heavily in favor of the solution. That is, there is not enough potential that it is ever likely to offset solar heating, except in certain conditions. So, there was no real commercial benefit to developing the system and we, personally, couldn't benefit from a one-off.
 
Sep 24, 2018
3,599
Catalina 30 MKIII Chicago
I figured it would likely be impractical. A recirculating water bath should work for cooling beer to a tolerable level but far from cold
 
Apr 25, 2024
660
Fuji 32 Bellingham
Now ... not to jump topics, but a similar approach can be used to purify water. I did a proof of concept a while back that used the differential temperatures, combined with solar heating, to make a decently efficient solar still. It is the kind of thing that only makes sense for extended offshore passages and as a supplemental water source. But, it does work pretty well.

I figured that if I upsized my prototype to a size I could live with, we could produce a gallon or two of distilled water on an average day - depending on conditions. Not enough to meet all needs, but also not nothing. And, it consumes no battery.

We don't have plans to go offshore for the next couple of years, so this sits on a large pile of "some day" projects.
 

colemj

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Jul 13, 2004
693
Dolphin Catamaran Dolphin 460 Mystic, CT
If one needs cool air and water, then buy an A/C and a watermaker. This gimmicky stuff is false economy, never sufficient, and more likely to fail.

Mark
 
Sep 24, 2018
3,599
Catalina 30 MKIII Chicago
If one needs cool air and water, then buy an A/C and a watermaker. This gimmicky stuff is false economy, never sufficient, and more likely to fail.

Mark
I have some magic snake oil that works great! I'll give you a great deal on my extra bottles!