I have been attempting to find somewhat reasonable cooling options to beat the summer heat so I can keep trout or other cool water fish. So I have been researching with Google quite a bit and found an interesting item.
Evaporative cooling will cool both air and water to the wet buld temperature of the ambiant air. The University of Florida has a research paper on Evaprotive Cooling for Aquaculture, which I am attaching here.
The critical factor is Design Wet Bulb Temperature. Some of these can be found online for certain cities. If you can not find your specific areas can not be found you should be able to get this data from any HVAC installer, as they use these figures in their design and energy audit programs to properly size HVAC installations. These figures are based on historical temp and humidity figures.
From the figures I have found so far, I am worried I will also need some form of mechanical cooling as I would be running very close to the upper tolerance on those 1% days. So the search continues.
Evaporative cooling will cool both air and water to the wet buld temperature of the ambiant air. The University of Florida has a research paper on Evaprotive Cooling for Aquaculture, which I am attaching here.
The critical factor is Design Wet Bulb Temperature. Some of these can be found online for certain cities. If you can not find your specific areas can not be found you should be able to get this data from any HVAC installer, as they use these figures in their design and energy audit programs to properly size HVAC installations. These figures are based on historical temp and humidity figures.
From the figures I have found so far, I am worried I will also need some form of mechanical cooling as I would be running very close to the upper tolerance on those 1% days. So the search continues.
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