Mmiller40gt
arrogant reefer
Im not good with the math of thermodynamics or even great with electricity.
I was considering fans or a chiller to cool my 90 gallon 5 degrees. Fans work by evaporative cooling. So any heat removed from the tank by fans is put into my house for my AC to cool. That air is obviously very humid and one of the chief reasons your house ac works efficiently is by removing humidity. A chiller on the other hand works via vapor compression. The heat removed from the tank is moved into my house without the humidity but at the cost of more electric usage.
So do fans using little electric but adding humidity to the house cause my AC to use more electric than a chiller would cooling the tank without the added humidity? Or could they be equal? I guess it depends on the efficiency of the chiller and the central air.
I was considering fans or a chiller to cool my 90 gallon 5 degrees. Fans work by evaporative cooling. So any heat removed from the tank by fans is put into my house for my AC to cool. That air is obviously very humid and one of the chief reasons your house ac works efficiently is by removing humidity. A chiller on the other hand works via vapor compression. The heat removed from the tank is moved into my house without the humidity but at the cost of more electric usage.
So do fans using little electric but adding humidity to the house cause my AC to use more electric than a chiller would cooling the tank without the added humidity? Or could they be equal? I guess it depends on the efficiency of the chiller and the central air.