Cheap Geo Thermal Air Conditioning

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  • Опубликовано: 19 май 2024
  • Geo Thermal air conditioning system you can install for about $1,000 that only uses about 100 watts to operate 24/7 cooling your house, garage or greenhouse.
    Chapters:
    00:00 Introduction
    01:35 Cooling in High Humidity
    03:26 Equipement List
    06:12 Excavation
    07:30 Freezing Water
    08:42 Microbes
    10:10 Ground Temperatures
    11:42 Comparing Units
    13:01 Summary
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Комментарии • 2,6 тыс.

  • @oldgoat8861
    @oldgoat8861 2 года назад +703

    My Dad ran a closed loop system back in the mid 1970's ...same as yours. He used 2-aluminum car radiators stacked back to back zip tied, with connector hoses. To presure our closed loop line we used a hot water base board pump. He used a thermostat switch that powered a AC-fan and was the same switch that powered the pump. He used RV (pink) fluid for the lines.
    Later he put a line (burper), basically to get rid of air in the lines, but really didn't need to do that. We were fortunate enough that we had our own backhoe to lay our lines. I cut 4 ditches @ 5' × 16" × 100' runs and we sand bedded the bottom of the trenches...laid a DOUBLE line (4 loops) and sand bedded again. Than backfield dirt to about 12" from the top. AGAIN sand bedded about 4"deep...ran a second DOUBLE LINE (4loops), sand on top and about 6" of topsoil.
    SO HE MADE A STACKED.....AC/HEATER BED.AC on the bottom, heat on the top lines. Simply attached those lines to a 2 seperate-4 way splitter and used a BALL VALVE TO SEPERATE THE UPPER AND LOWER CLOSED SYSTEMS. The splitters joined to a single line and ran to the line circulator pump....and a single line ran from there to the radiator. A return back line from the radiator was to a 2-way splitter controlled by a single ball valve.
    During the summer rotate 2 ball calves one direction for AC/bottom lines.......during winter rotate both ball valves the opposite direction for heat/top lines.
    WE STILL USE THE VERY SAME SYSTEM TO THIS DAY.......ONLY THING REPLACED was 2 circulator pumps over the pass 45yrs. Our hose bed at the bottom has spring water feeding to it. On AC our house will drop to 61-62°F and freeze you to death if left on constantly (so the themastat switch) was a must. Heating....can't say it's the best...helps in early spring but not as a primary source up here in the North Country. So the system turned into TOP LINES AS A PRECOOL and BOTTOM LINES AS THE COOLER....FOR A.C. ONLY !!
    THE BEST A.C. EVER....SUPER CHEAP....AND CAN BE RUN ON DC SOLAR POWER 24/7

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +45

      That's awesome! Thank you for sharing!

    • @curtb.
      @curtb. 2 года назад +31

      Wow, thanks so much for the detail!

    • @daryllucero2349
      @daryllucero2349 2 года назад +21

      @Old Goat I am currently designing a house and solar system for an off-grid house that i am building. Would you be willing to help me a simple design to be able to create a system, such as what you’re talking about?

    • @chrisplant1418
      @chrisplant1418 2 года назад +13

      Wouldn't the sand act as an insulator and reduce the efficiency of the system? I am not asking to nit pick just something that had me wondering.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +9

      @@chrisplant1418 it allows heat to move slowly through it so it stores heat well. it's not the most efficient to load but if the input is free,,,,

  • @arthurperrea3714
    @arthurperrea3714 2 года назад +60

    It works I tested mine that I put in late last fall. 1inch x 400ft , 160 psi here in upstate Burke NY . It was 90 degrees today It was 60 degrees in my insulated wood shop. I will be put another loop in for my home

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +11

      Thank you for your comment!!!

    • @Greenr0
      @Greenr0 Год назад +1

      how big is your workshop? Does it have condensation issue?

    • @arthurperrea3714
      @arthurperrea3714 Год назад +7

      Helen it's 520 sg ft and well insulated except for the floor it still working well but I thinking with are current weather a dehumidifier might make it feel a little better. It about 70 degrees in my shop but been 8o to 90 degrees outside .seems to kept at least 10 degrees to 30 degrees depending I'm guessing on the humidity. It's a keeper at 24/7 for around $ 10 per month. Still plan on putting one in house as soon as I can find time .lol

    • @Greenr0
      @Greenr0 Год назад +1

      @@arthurperrea3714 Great. Thank you for the info. How deep did you put the water line?

    • @arthurperrea3714
      @arthurperrea3714 Год назад +3

      10 ft and use the same trench to go back and forth .try to bed them in rock free soil or sand a few inches as you dig in case of a cave in I made a bigger hole like 6 ft round at the end this way you can just use a couple to tie your ends together and make a large loop 😉

  • @littlechestnutorchard
    @littlechestnutorchard 2 года назад +363

    I built one about 20 years ago and still working. Just recently replaced the circulation pump with a more efficient Grandfos circulation pump and a new radiator . Also I have another loop away from the first one and I am dumping heat into the ground in summer with a passive evacuated solar panel to warm my workshop in winter ( obviously changing the passive solar panel with a radiator . It work brilliantly and very cheap to run .

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +24

      Thank you too much for the comment! Cheers from Manitoba, Canada

    • @ggstorm9777
      @ggstorm9777 2 года назад +8

      Wow 👍👍

    • @dougatfuto5
      @dougatfuto5 2 года назад +10

      what size of Grandfos circulating pump did you need?

    • @littlechestnutorchard
      @littlechestnutorchard 2 года назад +10

      @@dougatfuto5 I fit (GRUNDFOS 95047567 ALPHA2 L 15-50 130 PUMP) It is common central heating circulation pump in Europe, power consumption is very important in my situation and this pump fits the bill. Also there are couple of settings you can play with. There are powerful ones with higher flow rate but this is just what i need.

    • @calysagora3615
      @calysagora3615 2 года назад +6

      @@littlechestnutorchard Any ideas on how to estimate what I need? What climate are you in?

  • @raydreamer7566
    @raydreamer7566 Год назад +33

    I have to tell you and everyone reading this - apply this knowledge to your next digging project - such as your house being built new or any excavation you have. The biggest problem is most people will not plan ahead enough to simplify there life in the new future . Great video and very inspirational .

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад +3

      Thank you!

    • @beefybuttercup2978
      @beefybuttercup2978 9 месяцев назад

      *Thier

    • @EdsPlace
      @EdsPlace 9 месяцев назад +1

      How so might you? Could we run loops under an entire basement slab?

    • @trainwreck420ish
      @trainwreck420ish 29 дней назад +1

      ​@EdsPlace yea, if you're pouring a new slab. I really wouldn't do that, unless you don't have a yard or even an easement. You would be better off digging in a part of the yard( call for lines first) and backfilling. On the off- hand chance you have to replace your lines. You really don't want to have to demo the slab and repour cement. Especially if it's reinforced definitely not of its under tension.

  • @PWN_Nation
    @PWN_Nation 2 года назад +124

    Great solution!
    Some additional info:
    1) ALWAYS call for utility locator before digging! (Blue Stake or dial 811 in US).
    2) You may want to also add a dehumidifier. Conventional AC units dry the air when cooling it. You may want to extract some of the interior air moisture, especially during late summer.
    3) Glycol-based coolants can prevent corrosion in the radiator. Water does not. Something to consider.
    4) The radiator (especially if the air isn't dry) can produce moisture. Think of a cold can of beer on a hot summer day. Consider including a pan to catch moisture under the radiator and draining it outside.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +12

      Great Tips!

    • @timm.6391
      @timm.6391 2 года назад +20

      If using only water, use distilled water, for less chance of scaling or other negative effects of raw or chemical treated water.

    • @ajarivas72
      @ajarivas72 Год назад +2

      @@SimpleTek your channel has motivated me to implement your great ideas.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад +2

      @@ajarivas72 thank you! Good luck with your project

    • @danyamskoy
      @danyamskoy 8 месяцев назад +4

      There is no need for separate dehumidifier, because this sistem acts like conventional AC. You only need to extract water, that will condense on the radiator... And it will))

  • @mountainman4410
    @mountainman4410 Год назад +34

    I was days away from starting an install of the other system you described. I was going crazy trying to figure out solutions to all the problems you mentioned in this video. I stalled on the project until I could figure them all out. I'm so happy I ran across this video! This solves ALL the problems! Thank you so much. I will be watching all your videos from here on out. I have an off grid homestead in the TN mountains. I love the lifestyle, and am always on the look out for new projects that will make life more comfortable.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад +3

      Thank you soo much for the kind words!

    • @dunexapa1016
      @dunexapa1016 11 месяцев назад +2

      Good decisions! I have been off grid since 2010 and this system is compatible in energy consumption with a PV system. Directly cooling with PV and Peltier devices are a VERY efficient option as well

    • @dirkjackson8939
      @dirkjackson8939 7 месяцев назад

      Howdy Mountain Man 4410. I like your comment. I also have land in the TN mountains (5 acres) and will be starting off grid projects in the near future. Would you mind if I pick your brain sometime for ideas? I'm curious on what you have done so far and what you plan to do. Thanks!

  • @thefootchair7071
    @thefootchair7071 Год назад +3

    I saw this last year and loved it. I did all this and became stuck with all the connections inside the greenhouse. I was getting a lot of leaking and so ended up using changing from the traditional pvc connectors and pvc glue etc, to using a garden hose connection system. I connected a garden hose from the radiator (there are adaptors to go from pvc threads to garden hose threads) to a garden hose connection and used garden hoses between the pump, the radiator, the tubing system etc. It doesn't leak and it is amazing. Works great. Thank you.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад

      Sooo happy it worked for you!

  • @stormthrush37
    @stormthrush37 2 года назад +204

    I feel compelled to point out that a system like this doesn't even need to completely cool or heat an area all on its own. Even if it only reduces demand for traditional heating or cooling systems, that's worth a lot, especially over the many years this system will continue working. It also occurs to me you could integrate such a system with some sort of thermal battery to "save up" the thermal energy produced during times when you don't immediately need it. For example, you don't need as much if any cooling from this system at night during summer, but with a thermal battery of some kind you could be saving up that extra cold for use during times of peak need during the day.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +17

      fantastic point!!!!!!!

    • @davefroman4700
      @davefroman4700 2 года назад +21

      You do not store cold energy. You create it by removing heat energy. Every time that you are running this system for cooling you are depositing heat energy underground for later use. In the winter time the most effective way to operate a system like this is having two set points for engagement. If you have it set to come one and keep the green house below 68F in the winter during the day you are actually storing excess energy under ground to heat the green house in the evening when the temperature hits 40F and it would engage again. And btw if you have the lines coming up in the middle of the greenhouse I doubt they would ever freeze as long as its pumping the water around. Its the fan that you want to control.

    • @shaneduffy4853
      @shaneduffy4853 2 года назад +6

      Ice batteries - few companies have gone out of business trying to sell them

    • @davefroman4700
      @davefroman4700 2 года назад +2

      @@shaneduffy4853 yeah, and very few people went bankrupt being wheelrights and ferriers until the automobile showed up...

    • @Aranore
      @Aranore 2 года назад +5

      If you incorporate pcms that could be very beneficial, or, a water tank. Most geothermal heat pump systems actually use water tanks as a buffer and a hot water tank for heating.

  • @MrKaelis
    @MrKaelis 2 года назад +17

    Holy hell, what a useful video!
    I'm kind of ashamed to say that I never thought of this as a possibility for year-round heating and cooling after reading an article about using geothermal for in-floor heating.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @tomhenderson1792
    @tomhenderson1792 2 года назад +918

    Needs less emotional selling and considerably more technical how-to, specifically linear feet of cooling tube per cubic foot of conditioned space requirements

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +53

      selling?

    • @jackson8085
      @jackson8085 2 года назад +48

      There are too many variables, size of radiator, temp of incoming water, fan cfm, this is something you need to experiment with.

    • @sixfive555
      @sixfive555 2 года назад +50

      It's okay if you don't understand, most everyone won't do it anyway

    • @carolhewett3756
      @carolhewett3756 2 года назад +131

      He's wasted no words. He just has an expressive way of speaking. I'm focused on the info and grateful that he produced the video.

    • @hkray
      @hkray 2 года назад +8

      @@greggbrady5728
      I thought it was one of the best simply how-to-geothermal videos on a simple system.
      Yes, all those variables you mentioned can matter - except the whining about pictures.
      but in the end
      If you have earth to dig and you run this system you will have valuable energy reduction/ cost savings.
      If you want to know about the plastic conductivity or thermal mass or whatever you wrote then that is fine but I don't see any sales pitch here. I just see a conservative $1000 estimate that seems even cheaper than $600 if you find deals.
      I assume from your complaint that you must be a geothermal installer and don't like the idea that it is way cheaper than people have to pay for a typical system. Kind of like plumbers are not happy now that we have pex-tube and shark bite joints. Who needs to pay him 200$ per hour when you can do it yourself.
      But yes your questions are relevant, and it would be a good video to make or you could do the research and forward to Simple Tek to make. I mean how long to know the conductivity of water pipe if you are in the business. Do you know offhand? I assume near the same as the plastic tubes used for air geothermal projects
      And he did mention he was using a 3/4 tube, although you could use a 1 " or 1 1/2 " tube.
      YOu could do the math for that problem too, while you are researching the conductivity of the underground water pipe....

  • @jackgood8792
    @jackgood8792 2 года назад +99

    In the interest of longevity of a water bases system - it's worth mentioning galvanic corrosion, in short - avoid using dissimilar metals in the loop ( talking anything in the radiator, pump, potentially metal tube fittings ) don't mix copper, aluminium for example, one type of metal only.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +7

      Well said

    • @--harry_
      @--harry_ Год назад +7

      Also think, EPA when it comes to leaks... So choose something that won't devastate the water table when it leaks. Yes, it is made to last but it's made in a 3rd country where price is more important than quality. I am seeing pex fittings only last 10 years.

    • @pinerock9668
      @pinerock9668 Год назад +6

      @@--harry_ that's why it's important to not have any connection under ground. Same with floor heat lines, it's not worth the risk of a leak.

    • @esthersmith3341
      @esthersmith3341 Год назад +5

      It's windshield washer fluid. Where does it go when you wash your windshield with it? The ground water perhaps?

    • @jacoberinc
      @jacoberinc Год назад +2

      @@--harry_ That is something important to think about. Perhaps a mixture of deionized water and propylene glycol(food grade), it greatly lowers the freezing temperature of the water and also shouldn't leave residue in the pipes.

  • @andygammie7394
    @andygammie7394 2 года назад +11

    I did a version of this, but I'm using it to cool the floor in my workshop in the summertime. It works great. I heat with propane in the winter. But I like having the ground loop as backup for freeze protection if I really needed it. I also did a open loop geothermal air intake setup for my greenhouse also works great.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      That’s awesome! Thank you for sharing

    • @arthurperrea3714
      @arthurperrea3714 Год назад

      I let mine run all last winter and at 19 below it got to 32 degrees but nothing froze as I put water bottles in different areas to test .I think the ground temp and moving air stop it from freezing.

    • @mojomojo5779
      @mojomojo5779 Год назад +2

      What do you mean by open loop? Thanks ahead for your help

    • @wigidy12
      @wigidy12 2 месяца назад

      I was curious how it would work straight into an insulated slab. Do you have any issues with your system?

  • @rodrigosouto9502
    @rodrigosouto9502 2 года назад +26

    That's a very sustainable solution! People doing videos about homesteading should know about this system.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +3

      Thank you!

    • @PankajDoharey
      @PankajDoharey 2 года назад +2

      Only with places that are sitting on a permafrost like canada this wont work in Florida , Texas or Nevada. Where Air Conditioning is actually required.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      @@PankajDoharey Canada has permafrost? I've lived in Canada all my life and never once have I seen permafrost and I've been to all provinces

    • @BrijrajJadeja007
      @BrijrajJadeja007 2 года назад +1

      @@SimpleTek Can you tell me how will it remove humidity without a compressor?

    • @rickbeline354
      @rickbeline354 2 года назад

      @@PankajDoharey I disagree. I live in SE Louisiana, and did a 3 loop 100' vertical system (for a 3 ton a/c) to provide a cooling source for the a/c system. Worked great for 10 years with minimal more work, until a house fire (from other causes.) That was 30 years ago. I have been thinking about re-doing it in a horizontal set of loops, but have not done it yet.
      Water table here is only a couple of feet down, unless it rains! Ground temp. ranges from about 70+*f at 6' down to in the mid 50s (constant) below about 30'. A closed loop (ECGW [Earth Coupled Ground Water] system using copper, either using a water based coolant or actually running the freon coolant through the pipe, will reduce the electric bill for air conditioning somewhat.

  • @robertqueberg4612
    @robertqueberg4612 10 месяцев назад +18

    My wife and I had a contractor install a Water Furnace heat pump in our home, about 25 years ago. It is a great system. What you are presenting is, as you have said quite a bit cheaper, and nearly as good for the cooling season.
    I will add a couple cautions before you get started. If you have a trench that is more than four feet deep, stay out of the thing. If you are in the trench, and a wall caves in on you at belly button height, you can suffocate with your head out in the sunshine, as you will not be able to inhale. Crazy isn’t it. Ask a pipe layer. Another thing to be cautious of is draining the condensate away from the radiator, and to the ground outside. Does anyone remember reading about “Legionnaires Disease”? The standing water can feed treacherous molds, which when combined with the fan, can kill your family.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  10 месяцев назад +1

      Good advice

  • @twiincentral8780
    @twiincentral8780 2 года назад +16

    Thank you for sharing this, love this kind of thinking. Literally have a source of heat/cool that we’re not taking advantage of. I just don’t understand why these geothermal companies charge so much to dig and place the loop. 10k-20k just to dig is ridiculous.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      So true!

    • @twiincentral8780
      @twiincentral8780 2 года назад +2

      @@SimpleTek would love to hear your thoughts on vertical loops for those that don’t have the lane. Would two vertical loops using well digging equipment work just as good?

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +4

      @@twiincentral8780 they work great but digging down usually costs more than digging out

    • @NigelM18
      @NigelM18 Год назад

      Money grab

    • @Twoicebergs
      @Twoicebergs Год назад +1

      Vertical loops are very expensive in Canada compared to the USA. It is probably just a supply and demand pricing issue. When I installed my geothermal furnace, the cost for each bore was about $2,500 in Manitoba. In North Dakota it was about $600. I would have needed 4 holes. I went open loop well to well. I was still overcharged for one well, $5,000. I just didn't want to dig up my lawn to go horizontal. Now after 17 years, I should have just dug up one of my horse pastures for the installation.
      Over the years I have thought of doing a similar build as presented in this video, as I have a new addition on my house that can not be served by my current geo-system. It would also work extremely well in my barn for lower heat in the winter - way cheaper than electric!

  • @scottwendt9575
    @scottwendt9575 9 месяцев назад +46

    One thing you will want to do if you are using washer fluid or antifreeze is to pay close attention to the amount in your system. If you suddenly are adding a jug or two a month, you probably have a leak and that could contaminate groundwater which depending on your soil and topography could kill gardens, fruit trees and even threaten wells used for drinking water. My parents have a fluid level monitor on their “heat pump” for exactly this reason. Their loops are just below the frost line, but even so, Code required it because of the sandy soil and a shallow water table that is both depended on for drinking water and interconnected with all the local lakes.

    • @lyleseaman4414
      @lyleseaman4414 9 месяцев назад +5

      probably safer to use ethanol. First, build a still...

    • @idahogreen2885
      @idahogreen2885 8 месяцев назад

      Get bent you doomcryer

    • @claytonjames4779
      @claytonjames4779 8 месяцев назад

      And if there's a leak exactly what do you do? If you dig up the system you're going to probably break it and spill all of that fluid out in the ground.

    • @scottwendt9575
      @scottwendt9575 8 месяцев назад +2

      My parents are required to hire a licensed and bonded company to fix any leaks. The first thing they will do is use a vacuum pump to suck out the system to prevent any additional spillage. Digging will be by hand and yes, it is possible the entire system may need to be dug up. These are all costs the environmental folks who are pushing to “replace fossil fuels” with heat pumps never talk about.

    • @claytonjames4779
      @claytonjames4779 8 месяцев назад

      @@scottwendt9575 but how frequent or rare might these breakages be? They are underground rated?

  • @davej7458
    @davej7458 2 года назад +25

    One thing that is realy important. Call for utility locates. Dial 811 in the US or what ever number is used where you live. Some utility's are very dangerous and expensive to repair if you damage them. The liability and repair costs are on you if you don't get locates. They will tell you all the rules. Some utilities were installed decades ago before the neighborhood or houses were built. They turn up anywhere and are completely legal. Generaly they only locate the public utilities and not your under ground; gas, electrical, sewer, and phone lines.
    If you are worried about the pipe you can generally order the same pipe with heavy duty thicker walls. It won't bend as sharply and may require a wider trench, the manufacturer can tell you. Also ask about repairing kinks.

  • @olafschermann1592
    @olafschermann1592 2 года назад +8

    I heat my house using a heat pump. The pipes are drilled 2x90m (300ft) into the earth. My best investment were the additional 400 bucks for passive cooling the house in the summer using the infloor-heating lines. Your DIY solution for just cooling is so simple and cheap and easy to maintain. Thank You.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      Thanks for sharing!

    • @stephen-dev
      @stephen-dev 2 года назад +1

      If I understand you correctly, you put the pipes in vertically rather than ran them horizontally, thus eliminating the need for 'an acre or so'. Probably saved yourself some time too?

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      @@stephen-dev well digging machines are often more expensive to rent than excavator though

    • @olafschermann1592
      @olafschermann1592 2 года назад +1

      @@stephen-dev correct. But it was much more expensive because you habe to hire a drilling company with Special Equipment. But it is more common in EU because of a land price of $100 per squarefeet and up (in/near a major city). So you think twice if you want to spend 700k just for the land or better „only“ 400k. Drilling 180m/600ft deep costed me about $14k

    • @stephen-dev
      @stephen-dev 2 года назад +1

      @@SimpleTek I'm talking about a ground well that is already dug... as a ground well.

  • @TheWebMindset
    @TheWebMindset 2 года назад +3

    This is cool and I can tell you're excited. I'm a US Green Building Council LEED AP and you've just given me my next project for my cabin on 50 acres in the mountains of West Virginia. My neighbor has a large excavator and this will be perfect. Thanks!

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      That's awesome! Thank you for the kind words!

  • @cm5838
    @cm5838 7 месяцев назад +7

    Interesting idea, but I’d add a few suggestions. First your radiator , the thicker it is the more thermal transfer you’ll get. A four core radiator would be what I’d look for, unfortunately more than 2 core is very hard to find but you can order four core radiators from performance shops like summit racing, desert cooler and I think jegs. The cooling liquid, ammonia can be harmful to aluminum, propalyne glycol (rv antifreeze, the red/pink stuff) is a much better idea, it can be mixed with water to a certain degree. As far as keeping the system free of air you can install air purging valves, for refilling you can add an auto fill for a boiler but make sure to use a small backflow preventer before the auto fill if connected to your domestic water pipes. Those parts can be found at heating supply shops that carry hydronic stuff. I’d suggest “taco” ( actual brand) air purge valves and watts makes good auto fill and backflow preventers.

  • @flipfloridalandebookbundle
    @flipfloridalandebookbundle Год назад +3

    This is so cool! Thank you to all the smart people who are leaving these amazing well-thought-out and detailed comments full of useful explanations thank you

  • @longwildernesswalks
    @longwildernesswalks 2 года назад +3

    Exactly. Base loading and mass balancing is the name of the game. If you can reduce the amount of heat you have to produce by 50%, you're winning now and later. Base load for the win.

  • @drproton85
    @drproton85 2 года назад +2

    Hey boss! I'm in love with this video!
    So much so that I'm going to copy and paste your idea into my own project. I'm planning on expanding my house in the next 1-3 years and I need an upgraded condensing unit... Until I saw this video!
    I'll be making progress videos, once I get started, using your method! I'll start this project sometime next year (due to finances). This year I'll start getting the materials together you listed in this video.
    Thanks so much and hope to share with you as I go!

  • @-HarmonyPulse
    @-HarmonyPulse 2 года назад +2

    Great info! What a fun experiment to start on! I’ve been fiddling around with ideas similar for a while! Thanks for the push!

  • @PandorasFolly
    @PandorasFolly 2 года назад +37

    Ha! Back in college we jury rigged a system like this. Except our town home had free water and the water was metered for the entire complex. Giant floor fan, 2 car radiators, and Our water supply was from a faucet. Worked pretty well

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +5

      That's awesome!

    • @spudchick317
      @spudchick317 2 года назад +1

      So you hooked up tubing to a pump and radiators and filled it with tap water? Was it a sealed system with like a drum or were you running large quantities of tap water (presumably at a lower temperature than the room) through it (which your comments about no water costs suggests)?

    • @PandorasFolly
      @PandorasFolly 2 года назад +8

      @@spudchick317 just water pressure from the kitchen faucet. no pump, had the water looped through one radiator and the next and then outside to a big blue barrel to try and make some use of the water like flushing and whatnot. Kept it on low as it was cold enough we didn't have tp run it full blast. We wipped it up while the Landlord was being slow as molasses at getting the AC fixed. We finally had to withhold rent to get them to fix the dang thing.

  • @davagain
    @davagain 2 года назад +21

    Mr. ST talked about 400 feet of 3/4 inch water line. In case anybody (like me) was wondering how much washer fluid that means the system will need, a 3/4 inch line holds about a gallon for every hundred feet.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      Thank you!!!!!!!!

    • @Dancing_Alone_wRentals
      @Dancing_Alone_wRentals 2 года назад +2

      Thank you! I was wondering. Any recommendations on how to place the pipe? Long runs or loops over each other? Thanks again.

    • @iam5085
      @iam5085 2 года назад +1

      www.omnicalculator.com/construction/pipe-volume
      ...or use the following formula:
      pipe volume = π * inner radius² * length (note the units)

    • @Dancing_Alone_wRentals
      @Dancing_Alone_wRentals 2 года назад

      @@iam5085 tHanks

    • @510Redneck
      @510Redneck 2 года назад +1

      Many if not most washer fluids have methanol in them - flammable.

  • @DJRonnieG
    @DJRonnieG Год назад +1

    I'm glad I found this video because most of the content on this topic is focused on larger and more expensive versions. Only issue for me is that there is a tree which blocks excavator access. We had one here in the 1980s, but the tree was considerably smaller back then. Anyway, now I'm looking into how practical it is to disassemble and reassemble a mini-excavator before I plan the old fashioned way.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад +1

      Thank you for the kind words! Good luck with your project

    • @alabastardmasterson
      @alabastardmasterson 9 месяцев назад

      That's practically the dumbest idea I've ever read on RUclips.

    • @wuffa4503
      @wuffa4503 9 месяцев назад +1

      you have no driveway,or cannot take out a section of fence?

    • @DJRonnieG
      @DJRonnieG 9 месяцев назад

      @wuffa4503 now that you mention, might be an option if the neighbors are cool with it. Would be easier if the fence was due for replacement (its pretty new, just wooden pickets and posts).

  • @mikealdag7309
    @mikealdag7309 Год назад +1

    Building mine now , I trenched out a 10foot by 10 foot by 10 foot hole , I'm laying 4inch pvc in parallel then to a 1 inch hose 400 feet long in a coil, spread out and back filled , then to the house, I read an article where they experimented with geothermal retention of pvc , it seems really very good , and I figured the volume of fluid in that underground mess of pipe will act more or less as a volume tank to help the fluid heat exchange better. Any insight or opinions would be great , I'm still trenching to the house so I still have a little time to change up my ideas , thank you for this video , people need to pay attention to simplicity and efficiency !

  • @christophercrouch8847
    @christophercrouch8847 10 месяцев назад +2

    I just want to thank google for ease dropping on my conversation yesterday and suggesting your video today. You've got a new subscriber out of it too.

  • @sevenravens
    @sevenravens Год назад +4

    Use a ditch witch trencher from Home Depot and lay in 4” pvc schedule 40 if you don’t have to go too deep. I used that method for a Kiva I built in the ground in Durango. I just made a 200’ run in a big loop around the property and used a couple of little computer fans in a push/pull configuration. Worked awesome in summer.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад

      They work but don’t dig much over 3-4’

    • @LoganAddisMusic
      @LoganAddisMusic 11 месяцев назад

      Ever any worry about mold in the pipes?

    • @SheridanAtwood-bd3ks
      @SheridanAtwood-bd3ks 9 месяцев назад +1

      I would like to learn more about the method you used in Arizona, as that is where I need to cool a small strawbale studio.

    • @cressentsgarden
      @cressentsgarden 2 месяца назад

      I want to do this for a small greenhouse. Would it work? How deep do I need to dig and how much pipe would I need to lay?

  • @mydevice62
    @mydevice62 9 месяцев назад +1

    This is excellent. Thank you for sharing. You seem very knowledgeable, and your passion for this idea is very clear in your delivery. I love learning from someone who is clearly passionate about their work.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  9 месяцев назад

      Thank you very much!

  • @Chillary
    @Chillary 2 года назад +1

    I wish I could like this video twice! Thank you! I don't know why we are not using these systems more in Canada.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      Canada , where I live, doesn’t get too hot in the summer. It’s more about hearing here. Was -40’ with windchill yesterday

    • @Chillary
      @Chillary 2 года назад +1

      @@SimpleTek That's cold! I am in Muskoka, Ontario. So far this year our winter has been mild, but we do get down to -30 or so here.
      Thanks for the videos!

  • @KeithOlson
    @KeithOlson Год назад +4

    For helping keep the greenhouse warm in the winter, you can build a rocket mass heater (for free, if you want!) that you only have to run for an hour or two each night or when it gets *REALLY* cold out.

  • @CaedenV
    @CaedenV 2 года назад +13

    Probably will never build one, but this is just fascinating! Really enjoying these greenhouse videos!
    But it does beg the question... if you are renting an excavator, why wouldn't you just dig the whole greenhouse down about 2 feet? Sure, take some water precautions, but I'd imagine you would want some sort of sump/cistern solution for water reclamation anyways (combined with a gravity fed water drip system). But just digging down a couple feet would allow the floor and lower 16" of 'wall' to constantly help regulate temps in summer and winter.
    But I am not sold on this as a good way to cool a greenhouse. At the end of the day this just isn't going to put out the same kind of cooling as a $1-2000 window unit. This would be more like using a $200-300 unit... but running on 100W instead of 500W. More efficient for sure... but how long it would take to use $800 worth of electricity using a small wall unit vs the time and effort and cost of doing this kind of passive geo setup.
    The cheapest and most effective way to cool things is an intake fan, and an air gap in a high place. That alone should be able to get things down to near-ambient temperatures, and with a few strips of cardboard and a drip system you can get slightly below ambient with a home-brew evaporative cooler (with oppressive humidity lol). Most crop plants are quite happy at 90*f, and don't really start being damaged until there are sustained temps above 100*f. If your temps outside are above 100*f, then you need a more active cooling solution... problem is that you are in a greenhouse with extreme amounts of solar gain! You could cover the glass, but that kinda defeats the point (maybe a mesh blanket to provide some shade?), so the other option is conditioning the air, which means sealing the system for best efficiency. But in a greenhouse you are then dealing with extreme amounts of heat gain to purge, which is why you would need such a large beefy AC during those times. Again, passive geo would help supplement a larger AC unit, or maybe allow you to get by with a smaller unit... but at that cost vs power costs... I'm just not sure you would ever hit a break-even, especially if you bill yourself for your digging efforts (which you should!).
    But for heating... that would be a different story entirely. For heating you want everything sealed anyways, and you just have so many other potential heat sources. During the day you are almost guaranteed free heat from the solar gain, so the trick is storing that heat to release at night with a thermal mass of some sort; large black barrels of water, a big back masonry wall, even the ground itself is going to give off a certain amount of heat. The 2nd trick is to then retain heat by preventing air exchange, reflecting heat (mylar is cheap!), increasing r-value with a blanket over the glass and insulated walls. Third trick is then adding heat if needed. If you have any real amount of power available, then the first thing that comes to mind is to add grow lights - have them turn on for a couple hours in the early morning (coldest part of the day), and they will add heat, and also extend the daylight hours, and it would be super cheap to implement and set up. 2nd thought is a cheap emergency heater... probably want one anyways for a freak cold dip, and if a cheap $30 heater just needs to run for a night or two to keep the crops alive... well... like the AC, it is going to take more than a few nights to make the geo worth doing. BUT, just keeping the plants alive and above freezing may not be ideal. Keeping them closer to 40-50*f at night could produce better growth and harvests, which that alone could make the passive geo system worth it.
    The thing to look out for though is that it is passive, so if you are in a more temperate winter area, then during the day the greenhouse might get above 50*, at which point the system is removing heat, instead of adding it. So put it on a thermostat, and if it gets much above 50, then be sure to turn it off so you can build up as much heat as possible before things dip below 50 again in the evening.
    But again... if you are renting an excavator, and you just dig down 2-3', then you are going to get a lot of these benefits of temperature regulation for free anyways without need of worrying about pumps breaking or water lines failing. The real lesson here is that if you are going to pay for an excavator, then dig the trench and bury the line anyways so it is there as a potential future option... but really just bury the building as much as you can. It isn't going to affect your sun intake, and will help a lot with temperature regulation during those cold winter months especially. The best passive geo is going to be when you don't need anything to make it wok for you in the first place.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +2

      walipini greenhouses trade light for geo thermal heat.
      also there's a lot of potential flooding issues , esp in spring with snow melt, when you dig down 2-3 fee where I live

  • @mrmr8228
    @mrmr8228 Год назад +2

    i feel like you just told me a secret, thank you for your taking the time to explain this powerful knowledge.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад

      Thank you soo much for the kind words!

  • @KellenChase
    @KellenChase 2 года назад +6

    Thanks for the video. Not relevant at this moment, but it’s changed my opinion on what to look for and think about when it comes to geothermal

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      Thank you for the kind words!

  • @uscitizen5656
    @uscitizen5656 2 года назад +4

    Very Interesting idea, especially since my A/C blower just took a dump and I have about 100' of the pipe lying around for what I thought was an outside water leak and I just kept it in case. In case may have just happened...Thanks for the idea.!

  • @jordanrowe5040
    @jordanrowe5040 2 года назад +5

    You sir are a genius and the demonstrations and explanations were 1000% spot on. You’re very practical to understand and approach is great. Thank you!

  • @mikefeddersen2476
    @mikefeddersen2476 9 месяцев назад +2

    I know this video is a general idea with all but the nitpicking details added. Thank you for this.
    I had a couple thoughts that really don't fit anywhere, but maybe someone could use.
    On the fan, if you use a box fan, mount a air filter to it. That way you filter the air in your workshop, or basement, or garage. It will save the radiator from getting plugged, especially if the fins sweat/condensate.
    Also a tubing like this run through an attic in the summer could heat a pool. I remember reading about a radiator mounted in an attic to grab the attics heat for a pool heater.
    Anyway looking forward to seeing some of your other videos.
    😊

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  9 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you for the great ideas

  • @HolyShitAccess
    @HolyShitAccess 8 месяцев назад +1

    You have opened my eyes, thank you sir.
    Now to get this setup done at my Long beach property in Washington.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  8 месяцев назад

      That’s awesome

  • @christawilliams9116
    @christawilliams9116 2 года назад +5

    I used to work for a geothermal installer.
    He used a 50/50 mix of methanol and distilled water.
    Got the methonal (DRAGSTER FEUL) at the local drag strip for cheap.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      great tip

    • @thebizop
      @thebizop 2 года назад +2

      Sounds explosive

    • @christawilliams9116
      @christawilliams9116 2 года назад

      @@thebizop It is important to mix it outside with good ventilation.
      Then it's safe.
      If you bring undiluted methanol into an enclosed space, if we're to ignite the flames are invisible.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      @@thebizop BOOMY!!!!!

  • @Snailmailtrucker
    @Snailmailtrucker 2 года назад +5

    Great video ST... You Rock ! Liked/Subscribed !
    I appreciate all that you put into these Free Instructional Courses !

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      Awesome, thank you soo much

  • @paulbaker3144
    @paulbaker3144 Год назад +1

    The design of our house has a 4’ crawlspace buried in 4’ of gravel. The idea was to keep the house cool (and warm in winter) and a crawlspace of course. We will see how well it works this summer. I’m thinking it won’t be enough so am considering a ground loop similar to this video.

  • @kistuszek
    @kistuszek 2 года назад +2

    I just built a diy AC this year. I literally just took off the outside heat exchanger from the busted split ac unit and piped well water through the coolant pipes. 16C well water 100 liter an hour solves my problem. The indoor blower that i wired to bypass the original pcb consumes 15 watts. The well pump runs like 1 / 10 of the time and consumes like 600 watts. So average 75 watt for the whole thing. You can irrigate with the water that runs through the ac, or let is just drain through the soil to find its way down to the watertable. Spent a hundred bucks worth of local money for all the plumbing and electrical supply i used. But honestly, for the same performance, you can just hook up a garden hose and be done with it for free.
    Now this off course presumes you have a nicely compatible well. A low powered well pump works great with this, like those 100 watt pulsing cheapo stuff. Or a normal 500- 1000 W pump with a water tank. Key is to not run a big pump continously with a small flow, wasting a lot of energy.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      well systems work great!

    • @timdunne4363
      @timdunne4363 2 года назад

      What if one did a hybrid of yours and the author's? Keep the closed loop of the author's, use the outdoor HVAC condenser indoors as the radiator and fan. I do not have a mini split. Based on your experience, do you think that would work?

  • @LBSolar
    @LBSolar 2 года назад +47

    Maybe I missed it but as long as you're running anti-freeze this should also work as a base load heater in colder climates if the ground temp down there is fairly high. If ground temp is 60F, that's 28F less heating from the freezing point you have to pay for. You would only need to pay for heating from 60F (minus efficiency losses) to around 72F. That's about a 12F delta instead of 40F... a 70% saving in fuel costs.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +2

      yes

    • @buffdaddymike8534
      @buffdaddymike8534 2 года назад +7

      you have to run approved anti freeze liquid through the lines. most store bought anti freezes are not approved to dump it to the ground, so they are not applicable to this system.
      he mentions glycol, that is what the pros use, they mix it 10% glycol to 90% water pending the location.
      not to sure about using windshield washer fluid either.
      safe alternative is boat and camper winterizer

    • @buffdaddymike8534
      @buffdaddymike8534 2 года назад +14

      NOT REALLY, if you have ground temp at 60F and room temp at 72F. you will be pulling the heat from the room and putting it in the ground.
      heat travels from hot to cold.
      It would be like running the heat and A/C at the same time.
      you could turn a heater on when in use and turn the geo thermal. at that point you may want to wait a while before turning back on
      if the ground temp is 60F you may only get the room temp up to around 40F. remember this is just a slap together system. you will never get 100% efficiency.

    • @shawnd567
      @shawnd567 2 года назад +3

      @@buffdaddymike8534 You are correct! You'd increase your heating load if you did it like the other guy said. Now if you wanted to winterize your place and just keep it above freezing, that would work.

    • @extraincomesuz
      @extraincomesuz Год назад +4

      If you backfill with sand and heat the sand in winter with solar electricity, it will stay warm for a longggg time search for sand battery

  • @nauy
    @nauy 2 года назад +12

    Brilliant idea! It's a low efficiency refrigerant-free closed loop system that is dead simple and cheap. Simple is great for maintenance. I would put multiple branches in the ground that T off of the main lines from/to the pump, keeping theT above ground. Though I wonder how long the pump and radiator will hold up to the corrosive methanol/ethanol in the all season windshield washer fluid. Maybe the propylene glycol based RV/Marine antifreeze would be better? They are also cheap and safe to handle and usually contain corrosion inhibitors. BTW propylene glycol is used in industrial heat transfer fluids.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +5

      people who have these usually get 15+ years before changing radiators.

    • @denisc958
      @denisc958 2 года назад +5

      Considering how refrigerant is bad for the environment, this is great.

    • @CA.....
      @CA..... 2 года назад +1

      @@denisc958 Yes, this is very true.

    • @TheAnticorporatist
      @TheAnticorporatist Год назад +1

      Holy Crap! Walmart was closing out that "RV antifreeze" the other day. I wanted to get some, but just didn't think that I had a need!

  • @marieennis6114
    @marieennis6114 3 месяца назад +1

    I have been trying to think of a way to do this for years I had some things figured out on my own but the radiator and the water pump thing great idea great I thank you so much for pulling this idea all together in my head I will be starting on it in the spring.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  3 месяца назад

      You’re very welcome

  • @rodhawkins5037
    @rodhawkins5037 3 месяца назад +1

    3rd year on my system. 600 ft long 8 ft deep 2- 1 inch lines spaced 16 inches apart. Keeps my garage 40x40 12ft ceiling pretty comfortable in summer. In the winter it stays about 40 deg.f at night and warms a bit during the day. I run plain water in it and haven't had any issues. I fixed it with a condesation pan , i have collected water from it but not as much as i thought it would.
    I'm using a 20x24 radiator for a wood boiler.
    Oh, it took me 40hrs to dig (3 days in the hot seat ,sun up till sun down)😂

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  3 месяца назад +1

      Thank you soo much for the information!!! Congrats on an awesome system !

  • @atranimecs
    @atranimecs 2 года назад +6

    im glad you differentiated between these types of systems and GAHT ( ground air heat transfer) systems.....I didn't know about the liquid loop based systems until your and a couple others' videos, seem a LOT more resilient and that's good to know.
    I hate when people talk about an inferior alternative when there is a better solution that is still cheap.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      Thank you for the kind words!

  • @davek9384
    @davek9384 2 года назад +12

    Have to say this is one of the most interesting systems I've seen on your channel! I've been looking for an alternative to the portable evaporative cooler I have been using in my "2+1" garage and workshop. It works OK for cooling in the summer (high desert of New Mexico) but uses quite a bit of water, and we are in this longterm drought. Plus, it's of course useless for heating in the winter. Hoping you are coming up with an instructional how to on this? A really really detailed how-to for the tech-challenged portion of your subscribers (like me)? Thanks! Dave

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +4

      I'm going to be posting my installation soon. I own an RV park and when I add holding tanks I rent an excavator, I can use it then to put this in

    • @drakekoefoed1642
      @drakekoefoed1642 9 месяцев назад

      maybe you could chlorinate some of your gray water, run it through a filter, maybe a sand filter you can backwash. i imagine you would run a shower drain into a barrel or something, then let it overflow to get rid of floating crud, and pump the water out with a little submersible pump, 50W should do it. hang the pump off the bottom to avoid the sediment. your filter could be a piece of window screen

  • @earthenergyhex
    @earthenergyhex 2 года назад +1

    this is awesome, I never thought of doing it before. I'm gonna try it in a 10 x 15' shed.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      Thank you for the kind words! Best of luck on your project!!

  • @jopalolive
    @jopalolive 2 года назад +1

    I had an idea for a variation of what you are showing. Here in the South West Pro-Panel metal roofs are common, and I thought that just putting sheet material over the tops of the Propanel would make ready made channels that air could be circulated through, sun in the winter, and night sky in the summer. It utilizes existing roof space. It would work for a garage or green house or thermal mass in a crawlspace. That way like you mentioned you don't have to worry about mold, or Radon or filling up with water. It could be installed in new home construction.
    I really like your variation of space heating.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      Very interesting!

    • @guygifford
      @guygifford 2 года назад +1

      I didn't understand your idea, although, I'd like to understand it.

    • @puttpearson996
      @puttpearson996 9 месяцев назад

      I've had the same thought over the years to lower the heat load to close to ambient temps going into my shop in the TN summers. For it to work, the 2 sheets of metal do not need to touch each other or there will be bridging. Some type of spacer of a inch or more should be used.

  • @JKarle
    @JKarle 2 года назад +4

    Be very nice to see a build and then in use video. Love the idea and will look at it for my future green house and my garage

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      Thank you for the kind words!

  • @anitahamlin2411
    @anitahamlin2411 2 года назад +35

    More actual assembly instructions are needed!

  • @kaf2303
    @kaf2303 2 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for spreading this information! This reminds me of the system I set up in a 100m deep water well I use it as is for cooling and use the water through a water to water heat pump that I built for heating my radiant floors.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 месяца назад

      That’s awesome

  • @gangrenesmith9999
    @gangrenesmith9999 10 месяцев назад +1

    Just discovered your vid. Epic information, mate. Thank you. From what I gather, there are some kind of tech like this since ancient times. 👍

  • @berg8970
    @berg8970 2 года назад +12

    I live in the midwest and installed a 5 ton geo thermal unit in my house. The average cost is approximately 3 times the cost of a standard HVAC system. Unless you live far to the north there is no need to dig so deep, mine was 5 ft deep and was dug by a trencher. For every ton of unit you need 500 ft of pipe in my case 5 lines connected to a header with one line from the header coming into the house under the foundation ( new construction). The average payback time for the whole system is 5 to 6 years. Geo thermal units are 400% effecient compared to the best standard HVAC unit. My heat exchanger rarely ever came on as my house was extreamely well insulated. I highly recomend these units to anyone. One last benefit you can also make hot water for your water heater in the summer time for free.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      Thank you for the info!!!!!!

    • @thefarmer5677
      @thefarmer5677 2 года назад +13

      You've listed the positive aspects of geothermal heating/cooling very clearly. Let me now balance that with some of the less positive aspects I've encountered from having geothermal heating/cooling in two homes in different parts of the county (one in NJ for 7 years, the other in NC for 10 years).
      1) All systems require maintenance and repair, and geothermal is no different. Salespeople will tell you that since the equipment is all indoors, it will last for 25+ years and require little or no maintenance. This is just not accurate. Geothermal units are just like traditional air-to-air heat pumps, but they use water/fluid instead of air as a heat transfer medium. This means that you will still have capacitors, contactors, filters, ductwork, thermostats, perhaps zoning equipment, all of which require maintenance. Think of them as a traditional heat pumps plus plumbing! Now, instead of just an HVAC repair guy, you need a plumber as well, all rolled up into one person. This will limit the number of firms that you'll be able to trust to work on your system. In some parts of the county, this may not present much of a problem (in northern climates you tens to find plenty of hydronic systems, so HVAC guys are familiar with water work. Not so much so in the south...).
      2) If you have a closed loop system (which is the norm nowadays), you have to hope that you never get a leak in all of that underground tubing, as there is huge cost tied up in the design and installation of the field, and making a repair to it can be a huge effort. You also have to hope that the designer of the loop did his job properly, taking into account the specific soil conditions at your site and properly sizing the pumping equipment to the loop(s). If your loop is too small, you will suffer temperature saturation and your system will fail to heat/cool properly. If it is too large, you have wasted money in installation and pumping costs.
      3) If you have an open loop system (not nearly so common these days, and actually prohibited by some municipalities), you have to be concerned with ongoing water quality issues. If your source well suddenly begins producing particulates (like from a mud seam opening up in you water column), you will find yourself unable to heat or cool geothermally. If your water hardness isn't appropriate (meaning you shouldn't have been sold an open loop system to begin with), you have to keep up with descaling your heat exchangers regularly. This is a cost that can become substantial. You have to be prepared to incur costs in replacing pressure tanks, well pumps, water filters, etc. over time. These costs can be substantial.
      4) Higher efficiency equipment which includes variable speed fans, multi-stage scroll compressors, sophisticated zoning equipment, etc. tend to be less reliable than more traditional, lower efficiency equipment. When high efficiency equipment failures occur (and believe me, they do), the cost of repair rapidly outpaces the energy savings you have enjoyed over time. As a real-life example, I have a Florida Heat Pump 5-ton split unit servicing the 2nd and 3rd floors of my home. The variable speed fan motor in the air handler failed. Replacement cost was $1800 dollars, including labor. I called 3 outfits that are experienced in geothermal systems installation and maintenance (one of which is the company that installed my unit), and all 3 gave me estimates that were within $25 of each other for the repair. The fan motor cost alone was over $1500. Compare that cost to replacement of a single speed air handler fan in a lower efficiency unit (typically $600 or less including labor). It take a lot of time to save $1200 worth of electricity.
      Geothermal systems certainly have their place - just go into them with your eyes wide open.

    • @berg8970
      @berg8970 2 года назад +2

      @@thefarmer5677 Anything with moving parts/ electronics will eventually need maintenance that's a given. Potential leaks on close loop systems: I would recommend placing scrap metal close to the surface of where the header is located or having some way to measure exactly where the header is, that is the only place it would leak under normal conditions. Knowing exactly where your header is located will reduce your cost dramatically for any potential repairs needed. Regarding loops being too long or too short, soil conditions I would recommend calling the manufacturer they will tell you everything you need to know for your unit and area that you live, don't just trust the Installer, do your due diligence. In my opinion keeping your HVAC unit as simple as possible is always the best way to go, less things that can fail. No variable speed fan, no multi stage scroll, no zoning equipment, if possible. As with all equipment everything has its attributes and drawbacks it's up to you to do your research prior to purchase.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +2

      @@thefarmer5677 Thank you for your insight - most of what you said is heat pump related though - this isn't that

    • @thefarmer5677
      @thefarmer5677 2 года назад +1

      @@SimpleTek Agreed - I am replying to Berg's comment, which IS geothermal heat pump related. :-)

  • @MrSparkums
    @MrSparkums 8 месяцев назад +3

    I am planning on doing this only using vertical diy shafts, probably a dozen 30-40 ft deep. I'd like to also find a way to either or both run it into radiant slab and a heat ex-changer into the central A/C system.. Figuring how to make it all work automatically will be the most difficult part in my mind. Awesome video!!

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  8 месяцев назад +1

      Very cool! Good luck

    • @bbqpelletsonline
      @bbqpelletsonline 6 месяцев назад +2

      Did you end up testing this out?

    • @MrSparkums
      @MrSparkums 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@bbqpelletsonline We wound up deciding to sell the lot and hold out for something in an agricultural zone so no, not yet. I found a video from a gentlemen who dug a dozen 30 ft shafts with pvc and a garden hose, then drive a loop of irrigation line down each one, tied them altogether and ran them to a heat exchanger. I might put these concepts together and tie into radiant slab or even add an exchanger into an air handler system. Lots of ideas about all this.

    • @eseehome6608
      @eseehome6608 11 дней назад

      i have a drill hole for well water ( but now i dont use well water ) and it deep like your but it only 60mm hole , did you tried vertical closed loop yet ? and what about result ? im worrying it dont have enough long for tranfer heat

  • @williamkreth
    @williamkreth 2 года назад +2

    Omg dude I never thought about using water instead of using the air! Brilliant!!!

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      Thank you

    • @barbidahoinsummer6769
      @barbidahoinsummer6769 2 года назад +1

      @@SimpleTek I just moved to AZ - I am only interested in the AC feature of this system. Old Goat system sounds great.

  • @harveyroad6
    @harveyroad6 2 года назад +1

    Am in Canada on clay soil. We are going to try this to heat and cool a 28'x36' garage. My goal is 10'C in winter and 10'C less than. summer hottest days. So am going to run a fan high up on the ceiling in summer and water lines in the slab for winter.
    Knowing that friction loss is directly related to pipe size am thinking of using 1" for everything so the pump won't work as hard. Thanks for this video.

  • @BulletproofPastor
    @BulletproofPastor 2 года назад +9

    We looked into this in the Texas Coastal Bend and learned ground temperature (sand) dropped to 75°F at 24" depth but increased after that. Much below that got into ground water and digging requires an active high-capacity trash pump.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      I wonder if all areas of Texas are like that or just where you tested

    • @solosailorsv8065
      @solosailorsv8065 10 месяцев назад

      If you hit ground water, that's the perfect heat transfer depth and medium. No need to go further. You Win !

  • @sunworksco
    @sunworksco Год назад +6

    PEX tubing buried in soils containing iron oxide can degrade prematurely. Even iron oxide rich water flowing inside the tubing can have negative effects. You also want to pressurize the fluid to 30psi and vent any air out, to prevent corrosion and reduce the load on the circulator pump. I would spend the extra change and use a proportional speed fan control/thermostat, with a squirrel cage fan for slow start and low decibel design.

  • @carolhewett3756
    @carolhewett3756 2 года назад +1

    Giving Fahrenheit numbers will help us Americans understand your system. I love the simplicity of this. I think I can do it (after the trenching). Thanks.

    • @MarkOfBitcoin
      @MarkOfBitcoin 2 года назад +1

      America nedds to grow up and learn metric!

    • @carolhewett3756
      @carolhewett3756 2 года назад +1

      @@MarkOfBitcoin it has nothing to do with being grown up. It has everything to do with tradition. Our measuring system is not unlike our centuries old common law (now codified) which is the best in the world. Unless you are into the hard sciences and math our measuring system is ingrained by the time we reach school age. PS And you need to learn how to spell.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      Sounds great!

  • @TheJagjr4450
    @TheJagjr4450 Год назад +2

    Thanks for this as it is exactly what I had in my head as far as a budget geo thermal, I have an unused well which has plenty of flow to provide 55 degree water - a couple of old car radiators and fans then I am in business.

  • @KrazeeCain
    @KrazeeCain 2 года назад +29

    If you combined this with a solar water heater array on the roof, you could possibly have everything covered. Ground AC in the summer, Roof heat in the winter, roof heat for your hot water supply, and a peltier (thermoelectric) array that uses both to generate power for your remaining electricity needs!

  • @makoado6010
    @makoado6010 2 года назад +22

    i have this in hungary cc 30years ago. except i dont use a pipe spiral, but i have a 250W pump in a well. the earth temperature in hungary around 11C at winter and summer aswell not much water need to cool down a house. and after cooling i drive this water into a rainwater storage and use to garden watering. yesterday was 40C here and kept the 25C inside.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      very cool thank you for sharing

    • @henzelreyamasol7299
      @henzelreyamasol7299 2 года назад +3

      Much better than hollow pipe coz molds would invade those hollow pipes and might cause respiratory problems.

    • @pparado
      @pparado 2 года назад

      @mako ado: Sounds great! If I understand correctly, instead of digging/excavating and laying long pipes around a wide swathe of land. I can just drop a hose into a water well, and circulate that water via pump to a radiator? Then the return flows back into the same well?
      Looking forward to a reply :)

    • @makoado6010
      @makoado6010 2 года назад +1

      @@pparado "can just drop a hose into a water well, and circulate that water via pump to a radiator?"
      yes.
      "Then the return flows back into the same well?"
      that not a good idea. u need a constant flow of cold water. and u cant drive back the used water into another well. because the water contains small particles and that will clog the sinking well pretty fast. best if u can use it for watering ur garden or drive into communal network.

    • @anonimus4639
      @anonimus4639 2 года назад

      Szia,tudnék veled erről beszélni?

  • @DrTofutybeast
    @DrTofutybeast 9 месяцев назад +1

    About 25 years ago I came up with the same idea... And installed one.
    Today I would just install an air source ductless Heat Pump. Super cheap to install and use... And provides real heat and cooling and reduces humidity.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  9 месяцев назад

      The air source heat pump stops working at about -20C though

  • @goosenotmaverick1156
    @goosenotmaverick1156 8 месяцев назад

    I picked up an old buss heater for free. Framed, with 2 12v fans. I plan on using it to do this and cool a greenhouse. Eventually expanding the system to cool the house and then use the remainder of the disipating capacity to cool the greenhouse

  • @gunnyd9282
    @gunnyd9282 2 года назад +5

    Dual 12 volt car fan! Depending on flow, you could also use 12 volt water pump. Methanol water mix to prevent freezing.

  • @IndependenceIron
    @IndependenceIron Год назад +3

    I did something similar one summer to cool my parents garage. Similar principle but instead of buried line, they had a Cistern right next to the garage and used a little pump to circulate cistern water thru a cheap $20 radiator i bought off craigslist. Worked quite well but produced alot of condensation on hot summer days. Needed a better condensation tray.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад

      That’s awesome, thank you for sharing

  • @johngiegler7653
    @johngiegler7653 Месяц назад +1

    Roughly 30 years ago I came up with the idea of burying a 4" solid drainage tile to cool and heat my shop. I never did build it because of concerns with too much condensation, mold and what if it got a hole in it and leaked water (it would be done). I laughed when I saw the example in this video of my idea gone wrong and failed! Some ideas are best left on the shelf; but in the moment 30 years ago I thought I was all that and a bag of beans. (not so so much) 😁 Thanks for this video!

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Месяц назад

      We all learn and evolve!

  • @skrywenko6596
    @skrywenko6596 9 месяцев назад

    I have a heat pump for heating, but i just just the ground loop for cooling by itself. it work fine it cool your house and keep comfortable ~25C. also works fine in heating/cooing greenhouse. but you use a large storage container and just change the water as a thermal sink. ground temp is only 10C so all it will do is extend your growing time in the fall to usually December . there not enough light at that time to grow anything so it perfectly fine. but if you are using your greenhouses such as I do in manitoba for growing peaches and nectarine. it also prevents the greenhouse from getting too cold -16c in the wintertime especially when it is -45c outside . but you have to use my particular high mass designed greenhouse . a normal hoop greenhouse will not suffice

  • @sween187
    @sween187 2 года назад +5

    We use this technology to warm our houses, it is able to bump the water temp up, then the rest it heated up traditional, so the gap it less in heating, 25c to 60c rather than 15c to 60c.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      That's awesome

    • @mtiris1
      @mtiris1 2 года назад

      Hello sween.How mush max degree in your area during summer and winter?and how much deep did you installed pipes under ground?Thank you very much

  • @HANDYDANDYHUSBAND
    @HANDYDANDYHUSBAND Год назад +5

    Hi Simple Tek, just wanted to drop you a line and express my thanks and appreciation for this excellent video. Very simple, straight forward yet detailed enough to provide all the information one would need. Keep up the great work. Being a fellow Canadian, I especially appreciate your content as it is climate similar to the areas where I would build. All the best to you, HDH [: { ].

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад +2

      Thank you soo much for the kind words

  • @mikegrok
    @mikegrok 2 года назад +2

    I see what you are saying, but the ground temp near me in south Alabama is about 75F degrees a few feet down. My cold water out of the tap is between 83F and 88F during the summer. However, the air temp is between 96F and 113F. If I add a second heat exchanger to the cooled AC line to drop the temp of the liquid from near 113 to near 75, that will be an enormous increase in efficiency of my cooling system. I am planning on circulating a loop with it passing through my rainwater recovery basin. (we get more rain than seattle).
    This is on a new construction project. There will be numerous trenches, might as well drop some geothermal loops into them.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      very cool

    • @davidburkhart9184
      @davidburkhart9184 Год назад

      Hey Michael how did this system turn out on the cooling?

    • @mikegrok
      @mikegrok Год назад

      @@davidburkhart9184 it is still at the architect.

  • @derekdevs
    @derekdevs 9 месяцев назад +2

    The clicks and pops in your audio can be fixed with izotope RX, audio plug-ins. The source of the problem, however, as improper audio gain staging when recording. It’s important not to clip when you are recording to digital format. With that said, thanks for this video!

  • @carlost9454
    @carlost9454 Год назад +3

    Few questions: how long of a trench you need or how many square feet of trench?
    How do you arrange the tube in the trench?
    How do you use this system in a house? You would need a dedicated room that would spread the cooler air throughout the house.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад

      Need a lot more info for most of those questions

  • @alec4672
    @alec4672 2 года назад +14

    I live 30ft from a spring feed lake. This is tempting. In my situation I'd only need say 100ft of pipe. The lake water is always pretty damn cold 🤙

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +6

      you can drop the lines in the lake but it's better to have longer lines just coiled underwater so the water in the system has time to cool down

  • @jafinch78
    @jafinch78 Год назад +1

    One of these can be great with an air filtrating (1-4" MERV11 at least) DIY ERV made from Coroplast or maybe better corrugated materials (I plan to iron aluminum screen I got, into both sides of the Coroplast to aid in heat exchange cost effectively) if you can find cost effectively and fabricate OK. I literally have been planning also to fabricate a subframe assembly on two of my garden tractors so can meet the "fits in my longbed pickup" that will connect a front end loader, high-low and a backhoe/excavator that'll reach 8ft just for this purpose alone. Actually, the high-low is for other projects. Amazing what can be found cost effectively in regards to materials for free other than the cost to remove and haul away if you're patient.

    • @jafinch78
      @jafinch78 Год назад +1

      Thanks for sharing, by the way!

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад

      Interesting!

  • @slypig24
    @slypig24 Год назад +1

    Great Advice. I would add, to only buy your circulation pump with a Brass or similar Pump housing. Don't buy a Cast Iron pump housing. You will pay a little more, but it will last much longer with no corrosion.

  • @adamgoldberg98
    @adamgoldberg98 2 года назад +3

    I love the idea and have wanted to do it for a couple years but live in the southern US ground temp 12-20 ft down is 72-75 f and even a well system will only get you down to 65 - 68 range (20 c ) not sure if the temp difference would be enough to cool in the summer but seems perfect for the north

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      thank you

    • @bobloblaw10001
      @bobloblaw10001 2 года назад +1

      Second this comment. Ground heat pump cooling doesn't really work in the Sunbelt.. or, it may work marginally well for a little while then the ground gets thermally saturated and stops doing much good.

    • @pearlrival3124
      @pearlrival3124 2 года назад +1

      you broke my spirits. any links to this info much appreciated. TN here.

    • @rickbeline354
      @rickbeline354 2 года назад

      It does work, but you may have to go to a vertical well(s) down 60 or more feet to get to the lower temp (55 - 60*F) range, and use the closed loop to provide the heatsink for a standard a/c or heat pump. Figure 30 to 40' below the 50' mark for the actual 'heat dump'. Then figure at lest one well for each ton of a/c capacity, spaced no closer than 15' to prevent heating the ground water feeding the next well. About 100' of actual cooling per ton. IE: one 350' well for 3 ton system. Or 3 wells of 140' minimum.

    • @geekthesteve6215
      @geekthesteve6215 Год назад

      If you are in a low humidity area (Arizona, California's high desert, Utah, western Colorado, New Mexico, Nevada for example) try creating a water feature outside with a couple car radiators embedded in the feature where they are not seen but you can have recirculated water cascade over them. To increase efficiency consider embedding a fan in the apparatus as well. This water feature would take the place of the buried PEX. Remember, before freon or ammonia based air conditioning systems people cooled with evaporative systems in the southwest quite effectively (and efficiently). Run the closed part of the system (where water passes though the radiators and into the part of the system internal to the house) like explained in the video. Again, creating a sand battery in any crawl space under the house would help you to store cold overnight if you chose to run your water feature overnight. Let me know how it works because these are my plans for my house and shop here in the high country in Arizona.

  • @ovadyarachman7243
    @ovadyarachman7243 2 года назад +3

    Man you sound like you can sell ice to an Eskimo. Love it.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      I can, they need cold drinks!

    • @ogamedia1
      @ogamedia1 2 года назад

      Simple Tek 😂😂 witty

  • @windpower1880
    @windpower1880 Год назад +1

    This blogger MUST say about length of the pipe, leng, depth of the trench.
    It very important for all viewers!

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад +1

      I like suspense

    • @windpower1880
      @windpower1880 Год назад

      @@SimpleTek
      You are right, you as you are a SIMPLE technician.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад

      @@windpower1880 ummm ok

  • @Chimonger1
    @Chimonger1 Год назад +1

    Plus, you can hybrid the cooling tubes, with solar heated tubing sections turned on for winter, with a modest backup boiler in very cold areas.

  • @jordangladden
    @jordangladden Год назад +4

    My only critique. Using low grade heat transfer in summer, the radiator may not get cool enough to dehumidify the air in the same way that a compressor driven system would. I think that someone should take an air conditioner and add a liquid to liquid heat exchanger after the condenser coil for additional cooling from the ground water. In this way, the condenser can blow of some heat to the outside air and then get a boost of cooling from the ground water loop.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад +1

      This depends on your ground temperature where you live I would think

    • @ShawnJonesHellion
      @ShawnJonesHellion 9 месяцев назад

      I had to run dehumidifiers in the summer anyways. So...

  • @Vagitarion
    @Vagitarion 2 года назад +5

    8 to 10 feet is a considerable depth to be running a good length of trench. Especially if your ideal conditions for burial are in sand. Sand requires sloping outwards at a specific gradient from your trench base at that depth, or rated shoring, to ensure it will not collapse. I would not recommend anybody go that deep without shoring, especially in loose soil.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      well said

    • @rickbeline354
      @rickbeline354 2 года назад +1

      Easy trick: one person runs the excavator and a second person lays down the pipe. That way if the walls collapse, the pipe is already buried and less back filling is required.

    • @wuffa4503
      @wuffa4503 9 месяцев назад

      Go back and really LISTEN to what he said,,,amazing what people do not hear

  • @rogerl8488
    @rogerl8488 2 года назад +2

    Love it!!! I have Geo thermal system an I love it!! Electric bill never goes over 250 a month.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      That is awesome!

    • @arthurperrea3714
      @arthurperrea3714 2 года назад +1

      Roger , just wondering how big you house is and also are you referring to heat pumps

  • @healthfullivingify
    @healthfullivingify 2 года назад +1

    100% agree with your great concept. Thanks again for superior ideas.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      My pleasure! Thank you for the kind words!

  • @joecolletti
    @joecolletti 2 года назад +4

    Thank you for this video-- interesting and helpful! One question though. It seems like this works both for heating and cooling-- you're taking advantage of below-ground temps that are closer to what you want in your own space. But there were a few times in video-- and in comments-- where heat pumps are mentioned. Are these something different? Thanks again

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      heat pumps amplify the heat but will use more electricity -

    • @Aranore
      @Aranore 2 года назад +1

      Heat pumps use a compressor and a different medium than what is mentioned here so they take the cold outside air of -10c and spit it back out at -15c and they "pump" the 5c heat into the living space, so they "heat up" your house air from 15c to 20c in the winter.
      This system instead uses the direct heat temperature of the ground and can't amplify it - the air blown off the radiator will always be the ground temperature (commonly 6c-10c) It's still fantastic in either case because heat pumps become less efficient as it gets hotter and colder (more so colder side) so if you use standard heating systems in combination with this it can help big time.

    • @MelvinPhuti
      @MelvinPhuti 2 года назад

      @@Aranore There's also ground source heat pumps, which will use ground temperature instead of air temp. If your ambient air is below zero and your ground temp is consistently 16c, you gain a huge amount of efficiency. Same as the opposite end. When it is hot, instead of using the ambient air, ground temp can be used instead in order to achieve cooling effieiency

  • @masterv2118
    @masterv2118 2 года назад +4

    Build it .. see if it works as expected.
    Can you connect with a hose to cold water (pump) to the Greenhouse heating rad you already have and kick the fan on for a couple house.. ?

  • @ColeccionistaDeAtardeceres
    @ColeccionistaDeAtardeceres 9 месяцев назад +1

    Great video!
    I was exactly thinking about something like that. And I already have a useful car radiator. Thanks for sharing. Greetings from Buenos Aires, Argentina !

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  9 месяцев назад +1

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @WriteInAaronBushnell
    @WriteInAaronBushnell 8 месяцев назад

    What is the min space this could work with? Could raised garden beds help max out a smaller lot?

  • @Tarabaspence
    @Tarabaspence 2 года назад +7

    Great. I was worried about the GAHT system while growing cannabis. Definitely will do this instead of a GAHT.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +3

      I like liquid systems much better than air

  • @michaelglenning5107
    @michaelglenning5107 2 года назад +5

    Same concept can work for heating the greenhouse, but the water lines are placed under the greenhouse and pumped with solar hot water during the summer.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      exactly!!!!!!

    • @CaedenV
      @CaedenV 2 года назад

      Really, heating is the only viable use-case for this kind of system. If you need to cool things then a fan and exhaust system is going to be cheaper and easier to get thing to ambient. And if you need to get below ambient temps, but above peak growing temps of 80-90*f, then this kind of system isn't going to put out enough cooling to help... I mean... better than a sealed box, but pumping heat out of the space with an AC is going to be almost required.
      But to add heat to a space... yeah, I think this kind of system combined with other types of heat storage and a blanket system could keep those night time temps significantly warmer, and well above freezing in most areas.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      @@CaedenV clearly you don't understand how many tons of air cooling this system can do

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      @@CaedenV possibly

  • @andycordy5190
    @andycordy5190 8 месяцев назад +1

    Good luck digging a 6-8 foot deep trench with a mini digger from a hire store.
    I have a 3.5 ton digger and a 6' deep trench is absolute max unless you mak a ramp down and a trench wide enough to accommodate the digger IN the trench.
    Laying pipes in a trench that deep has significant safety issues and in mixed weather conditions the risk of a collapse is considerable.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  8 месяцев назад

      maybe you need more experience

  • @honda242654
    @honda242654 9 месяцев назад +1

    I have a cabin in the North Carolina mtns and I have 2 spring heads one has a small pond the other has a 60 ft diameter pond about 5 feet deep. Could the pipe be out on the bottom of the pond and circulate the windshield fluid through it?
    Also could you use an old ac a coil with plenum and fan to run a duct system?

  • @starbase18portugal
    @starbase18portugal 2 года назад +8

    Could you just hook it up with the central heating system so cool water flows through all the radiators of the house. Maybe with an additional heat exchanger in between to keep the liquids separated?

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +3

      Possibly!

    • @111jacare
      @111jacare 2 года назад +2

      @Starbase18: What you are describing is similar to the loops on a nuclear reactor. Water flows through the pile, becomes steam, then to a heat exchanger, then to the turbines. The two loops are kept separate by the use of the heat exchanger.

    • @michaelplunkett8059
      @michaelplunkett8059 2 года назад +2

      No, as hot moist summer air will have water condense out like a sweating glass of ice water and drip under every radiator in the house.
      Transfer point where air hits dew point and water condenses out needs drainage.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад

      @@michaelplunkett8059 depends if your area is humid, won't happen much in dry areas

  • @lynnbradley7387
    @lynnbradley7387 2 года назад +10

    Could you please do a follow up video to this showing exactly where everything is placed where does the end of the water hose go into where does the pump go where do you hook the or the radiator up to please thank you

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +2

      someday yes

    • @barbidahoinsummer6769
      @barbidahoinsummer6769 2 года назад +2

      @@SimpleTek I would appreciate that follow up too

    • @pparado
      @pparado 2 года назад +1

      Me too! Oh, and can you please share your opinion re: instead of digging and laying long pipes around a large area of land...can I use an existing water well instead? Maybe drop a hose to the bottom and pump the water up and into a radiator then dump the same back into the well? Will that work? OR do I need to drop coils of pipe into the well?
      Looking forward to a reply.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  2 года назад +1

      @@pparado it might work - use pex instead of a rubber hose

  • @hanselgelid2500
    @hanselgelid2500 Год назад +1

    If you stand on mostly rock you could perhaps build a deep veranda (with quite a lot of sun on the outer north west wall), on the often unused north side of your house and place a sand battery underneath insulated with hempcrete.
    Also thinking about using a vacuum pump to empty two smaller insulated chambers connected to the sand battery via a big sand filter. After some level of vacuum is reached in one chamber "the lid" covering the sand filter opens and creates quick big warm sand and air wave towards the first chamber. Next cycle the second chamber will suck the sand and air back towards the other sand filter on the other side of the battery. Perhaps one of those solar powered sterling engines could be partly used. Also since vacuum is such a good insulator placing some of your system of warm water tanks in these chambers should be smart.

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад

      Why not just use the rock? Drill into it

    • @hanselgelid2500
      @hanselgelid2500 Год назад +1

      @@SimpleTek Big bada boom ruclips.net/video/j8WLYzA0lCs/видео.html
      More into a "dark green house" insulated with a layer of rooms with different functions (like cooling, burning and growing) and the core is a sand battery approx 8x1.5x1.5 meter with smart layer by layer thinking to protect the hot core of the battery.. Now believe the Sterling engine can become a revolutionary component..

    • @SimpleTek
      @SimpleTek  Год назад

      @@hanselgelid2500 ok

  • @broderickcamel1701
    @broderickcamel1701 Год назад +1

    pretty interesting how simple and effective this seems