Review: Nano Chiller, Pacific Coast CL-85

I recently set back up my 12g NanoCube from last year and remebered the heat problems I had so I decided to pick up a chiller. Last year with stock lighting, the heat would go up to 84 with the lights on which was bad enough. During the summer, since my room is up stairs, it would heat up to high 80's since that's what the room temperature was with no AC.

Now, I also put on a 150w Aqualight which brings up the temperature considerably. Added with the summer heat, the temperature would go up to 87 when I did a test run 4 weeks ago. I purchased the chiller from www.aquatictech.com since they have a very good price on these ($156.99) plus great shipping rates. I recieved it in 3 days from Ohio to California. Upon first opening the package, the chiller was a very nice size (8.425x10x7). I could set it beside the tank, which is my bedroom, and not have it look like a big massive eye sore cooling unit. I set up very crude plumbing with vinyl lines, schedule40 fittings, loc-line, etc. The only pump I had available was a MJ1200 so I had that pushing water from the tank, into the chiller, and back up into the tank. So that was a total of 4 feet down, 4 feet up, and many turns here and there. With the little flow rate, I was afraid the chiller would not be effective since the recommended flow rate was 50gph minimum. Suprisingly, it has done very well with the temperature staying at 80-82 even though ambient temperature reached as high as 90 with 150w MH on for hours. I ordered an Eheim 1048 which is rated at 158gph so I'm guessing the cooling power will be a lot more effective once I get it set up. I really love this thing because it takes out the worry of my tank overheating without putting too many loud fans over the tank and massive evaporation.

My only complaint, the fan noise. Since this is a peltier chiller, it transfers the heat from the water to a massive heat sink and then gets dissapated by a large 120x38mm fan. It's also used as a heater so the fan turns on for both operations. In the middle of the night, it would click on and it sounded like a jet ready for take off, so that got pretty annoying. To fix that, I just replace the fan. I picked up a super quiet fan rated at 21dba from www.svc.com which is local to me and has awesome prices. The fan inside the chiller was a 24v and the one I bought was 12v so I had to install a voltage regulator in between the wiring and do some crazy zip tie riggin since it's not a standard fan (http://svc.com/acf12.html). Now, the chiller is no louder than a stock 12g nanocube so I am very happy with it.

In summary:
- Effective for 12g NanoCube w/ high 80's ambient temperature & 150w MH
- Noisy fan but fixable
- Relatively great price
 
In a 90 degree room it kept the tank at 80-82 thats pretty impressive.

But for the price couldnt you just pop an A/C unit in your window and keep yourself as cool as your fish?
 
I'm still a student living in my parents house. Funny how our house is worth about $1 million and yet no AC. My parents would probably kill me for getting an AC unit for my room because of power consumption. They're penny pinchers like that and prefer the good old fashion fan. It's mostly my room and the others around it which get to 90 because it's upstairs. The downstairs stays pretty cool so it's no problem for the parents.
 
A million dollar home in CA is a 130,000 dollar home on the east coast. Don't let the wacky prices in CA fool ya.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7668921#post7668921 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by wav3form
A million dollar home in CA is a 130,000 dollar home on the east coast. Don't let the wacky prices in CA fool ya.
That would mean east coast homes in the area you speak of have low low property value if the same size house here is worth 8 times more. I live in Milpitas which is a bit more than average for property value in this area. A nearby city, Saratoga, sold a two bedroom one bath house for half a million a couple years back.
 
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