6 Genius Cooler Hacks
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- Опубликовано: 12 фев 2017
- This rotomolded cooler tested off the charts : amzn.to/2xOjfEw
Super Charge Your Camping Cooler
6 Great Cooler Hacks
SUPER POLAR BEAR TUBES
You may know a polar bear tube is a PVC pipe with water inside it and the ends sealed. You store them in the freezer and put them in your cooler when it’s time to go. They are a reusable, space-saving, high-efficiency, no-mess solution to keeping your food cold while camping. You can make SUPER polar bear tubes by adding ½ cup salt per gallon to the water in those tubes. The salted water freezes at a lower temperature so the ice in the tubes lasts longer.
To make your own Polar Bear Tubes, measure the internal dimensions of your cooler and determine if you want the tubes to run the long way or the short way in the cooler - you may want some of each. Also measure the internal dimensions of the freezer where you’ll store the tubes when not in the cooler! You want them to fit easily in the freezer, too.
Cut PVC tubes one inch shorter than the length you measured. Use either 1 ½-inch or 2-inch PVC pipe. Remember, the larger the mass of the ice inside the tube, the longer it will last, so larger tubes will stay cool longer than smaller ones.
With an appropriate sized cap and PVC cement, seal one end of the tube. Follow directions on the cement for drying time, then fill the tube just over ¾ full (80 percent is about right) with salted water. The empty space allows expansion of the freezing water without breaking the tube. A mix of ½ cup salt per gallon of water will result in a solution just a bit more salty than seawater. It will freeze at about 28 F rather than 32 F.
Carefully seal the open end with cap and allow to the cement to cure with the tube standing upright so the water doesn’t reach the cement. Decorate the tubes anyway you see fit. Make them unique, because you want to keep track of your SUPER tubes. Once the cement is cured, put the tubes in your freezer, and they will be ready for your next outing.
MAKE A GREAT GRIPPY BOTTOM
When you throw a normal cooler into the bed of a pickup truck or on the wet deck of a boat, it slides all over the place. It gets banged up and wrecks stuff around it. Heaven forbid, you should want to stand on it to get a better view of … whatever. A few large anti-skid pads strategically placed on the bottom of the cooler quickly eliminate all those problems.
To ensure good adhesion to the plastic, if the surface is rough smooth with some sandpaper or emery cloth. Then use rubbing alcohol to clean off the places where you intend to attach the pads.
BUILD A FALSE BOTTOM BONANZA
Those Super Polar Bear tubes you made in Hack #1? Another great use for a couple of them is to support a false bottom in your cooler. That way if you use regular ice in addition to the tubes or any of the frozen food thaws, the run off drains to the bottom of the cooler but the contents stay high and dry above it.
Making a false bottom is so easy! Get a length of that white, coated wire shelf material. Cut it down so it fits in the bottom of the cooler. Zip tie two or three polar bear tubes between the wires and lay the system in the bottom of the cooler. Voila! You’re done. No more nasty melt water and who-knows-what-else slurry contaminating your camping food.
WORLD’S MOST IMPORTANT COOLER HACK
The best thing you can do to preserve ice and keep everything colder is put an added layer of insulation at the top. A couple of custom cut pieces of foam insulation work well, but even better is a flexible foam pad (like the backing on mouse pad) that can lay over the top. Then when you open the cooler you lift up only the end of the pad you need to access what you’re after.
The more insulation, the better. Take whatever material you decide to use for your cooler pad and cut to size so it fits snugly just at the top of the cooler. If you go for two layers, cut the inner layer in half and glue it to the single top layer. This makes a “hinged” lid so you only expose half the contents to that nasty warm air when you open it.
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I like to add a 3rd and 4th lid as well. Most of the time my friends and family will get discouraged by the extra lids and give up. Ensuring my beer stays cold longer.
😂
Lol!!
lol
Frozen water bottles can be used instead of cooling packs. And you can drink the water when it thaws. I have been doing the rack thing at the bottom of my coolers for a few years and it's great! I use different coolers for different items. If you have beverages you want them in the ice cold water; however, meats or other things you don't want floating around in that even if they are sealed in bags. It depends how picky you are with the cleanliness of your food items. The racks keep your food from coming into contact with the water.
The zip tie and non moving pads were simple but genius ideas. Thanks
Came to see someone cut a cooler in half. I was lied to.
Russ Estridge
youtube is brutal
click bait!
same, I was expecting that too
Same here but then I thought of the title. Cooler "Hacks". He's using a hacksaw.... Very punny...
You weren't lied to. At no time is it ever mentioned that they were going to cut a cooler in half.
You ASSumed from what you saw just as the majority of us did that one was going to be cut.
I think Ryan Matthews has it figured out.
7. Make sure everything that goes in the cooler is as cold as it can get before it goes in. 8. Pre-cool your cooler, 9. Keep it out of the sun and in the coolest place you can.
Nonya Damnbusiness I had a girlfriend nonya once.lol.
Excellent tips Nonya!
50 Campfires
Nonya Damnbusiness dig a pit into the sand or dirt to keep it insulated
As long as the cooler wasn't buried directly in the sand and was setting in a pit that should help.
the sticky feet was a good idea. but, I like that my cooler slides easily, it makes it easier to grab and pull. I never seem to have room for it to freely slide around in transport, i'm usually packed with gear holding everything in place. but it's nice when loading/unloading to be able to set it down and slide where I need it to be.
instead of just making a lid from the reflective stuff. Cut and fit and form a complete liner. Did this last year after seeing it somewhere else. Worked extremely well. Another tip if you are taking along bottled water freeze them. I have yet to have one break. But as they melt they turn back into water supply. Great for packing around food no melted ice water ruining the food.
Shawn R , very good idea
My wife will freeze some of the food we take camping to help keep the food cold longer and we don't need as much ice.
My sister got me on the whole water bottel as cooler packs thing. I like it.
They dont stay frozen very long with all the opening and closing we do, so I may try the reflective linner and pvc ice as well as other ideas in comments here.
@@Xanthro2 For bigger ice blocks. I use the big juice bottles. Fill them up with water to just below the shoulder where the bottle bends towards the cap.
Then add a 1/4 cup of salt.
Shake well and freeze.
Salt water freezes at a lower temperature.
Do not put food in contact.
It might freeze the food.
I put my beer next to it.
@@Xanthro2 How is the reflective liner/insulation going to help with keeping the contents cool when opening the lid? The lid is still going to be opened, and you’re gonna have to lift the liner up to access the contents. You’ll actually be keeping the lid open longer, bc you’ll have to lift the liner up too, unless you attach it to the lid.
Don’t get me wrong, the reflective liner is a great idea for some added insulation. But in no way, shape, form, or fashion will it help with losing coolness from opening the lid to get something out of it.😏
We’ve all been there, I just freeze some 2 liter juice jugs . No muss no fuss, and you can drink ice cold water when you need it.
Freeze the bottom layer of beer cans, as the ice above melts it refreezes when it gets to the super cold alcoholic beer at the bottom, making for one big block of ice and beer cans. You can't drink the bottom layer of cans for a few days until they thaw out, but it really makes for a long lasting cooler if you're out in the boonies. You occasionally loose a beer during the deep freeze process. Been doing this for years for those week long trips.
Will that method work for soda?
DO NOT UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCE FREEZE YOUR BEER!
The single best thing you can do is pick up some low expanding foam. The kind used around doors and window because it wont bow the jam or sill. Next , pick up a drill bit the same size or JUST a hair bigger than the tube thats attached to the can of foam . Drill holes into the edge of the cooler lid and unload one whole can of foam into the hollow lid. Wait 10-15 minutes for the foam to stop expanding.Drill additional holes to peer into the lid to see what areas have been missed. While looking through the holes , shine a bright light onto the lid to help with this. It is normal for the foam to expand back out the holes. Keep a rag handy for this , be careful, unhardened foam is VERY VERY sticky or wait for the foam to COMPLETELY harden and simply scrape it off. Trust me, filling that hollow lid with foam is priceless! Enjoy !🖒
That actually melts the ice faster. Been proven on another video. Identical coolers. Filled in the lid on one. Put both in his Jeep. Both with a bag of ice. Modified lid had less ice left inside.
I like to just drink the adult beverages really fast so I don't have to worry about them getting warm!
I usually just take some liquid nitrogen with me to keep the cooler topped off. Works pretty good. And the kids like playing with it.
Church Key!! Fantastic!! Took me back yo my childhood..😂😂😂
Always sprinkle a liberal amount of salt on my ice after the cooler is full works really well
Another thing I did to mine is added foam in the cooler - injected it between the walls . It says cooler A. LOT longer
For camping, smaller coolers can be packed inside a backpack, before you stuff a sleeping bag around the cooler for extra insulation. During night time, when you need the sleeping bag, you could place the cooler inside a jacket. On weekend trips, you can also freeze certain food items that you do not intend to use the first day, to help the freezing elements last a bit longer.
Funny I have been using the last tip I thought of a couple yeas ago. I ship a lot of stuff for my work. And always have the foil covered bubble envelopes. That added I noticed the soft lunch bag my wife has is similar material. So I cut a piece of foiled bubble mailer to fit and the flimsy bag stays cold ave of 8 hours or more depending on season. fold
These tips will be a great addition to my canooler!
Actually cold air drops not rises. You should put a double layer of reflectix in the bottom also. Make sure you use a waterproof adhesive and seal all the way to the edge because you don't want a moldy mess in the bottom. Another tip is to put a good brand trash bag in your cooler then put the ice, food and drinks. This way if you have a spill it won't mess up the cooler. If you really want to insulate well line the entire inside with reflectix.
Great video! Thanks for the tips!
Today I learned that 3/4 = 80%...........
Hahaahahhhah!!!
Not all the time. 3/4 of 100 is 75.
Lol
Lmfaoooo
🤣🤣🤣
All wonderful ideas if you still use coolers. We go camping a lot now during the pandemic since we can't fly anymore. We've switched over to those new cheaper 12 volt freon refrigerators that start under $200. Imagine no more ice, melted water and soggy drippy food. No more runs to the store for ice. They are a major game changer for us and we can bring nicer foods like frozen shrimp, fish and yes even ice cream on your camping trip.
How long do they last before they begin leaking? Haven't had much luck with dehumidifiers, my thought is that an inexpensive mini-fridge would be even less reliable!
at 0:40 ..... i dont think my cooler has ever looked like moldy rotten spoiled 6 month old food just from the ice melting.... 😐
AJ Hainstock LMAO I felt the same way! I was like “Who on earth let’s that happen!!?”
@@moogledoodles It should be illegal
To me, that looked like a cooler found next to a person who has been dead for a few weeks and only now found....
Fairly certain they found that cooler at their friendly local meth lab.
The Reflectix is the only good idea. I find cheap coolers usually have hollow lids. I drill some small holes and pump in some expanding foam. Let it dry, clean it up, seal it and your cooler is significantly better.
The zip tie bottle opener...pure genius
What is the ratio of salt to water for the supercharged polar bear tubes?
I have also seen where someone put a small styrofoam ice chest inside a cheap cooler to give it extra insulation on sides and bottom (styro lid optional, depending on cooler dimensions). Even taking up only part of a large cooler that way leaves room for dry stuff. Or maybe put extra ice in the styrofoam ice chest insert? Or maybe use panels of styrofoam that come as protective packing for electronics/other as temporary cooler insulation? Does any of this sound reasonable?
The frozen pipes won't do near as much good at the bottom as they would at the top.
The top insulation sheet will do much more good at the bottom where most of the loss is. Feel the surface under a stationary cooler after it's been there for a while for proof.
The rule for both is that cold air sinks to the bottom.
Zombie reviving this to point out that heat ingression is what warms the food up, not air circulation (you know, because it's a sealed container). Having the cold rods at the bottom is just as effective as having them at the top because what they are doing is increasing the thermal mass inside the container and absorbing some of the heat so that other objects such as food and drink don't absorb as much of the heat.
As for the "cold air sinks to the bottom" idea, well yeah, and? Insulating the hollow lid is the best way to reduce heat ingression, which is the only factor in play here. Even opening and closing the cooler isn't as big of a factor, because as you said, cold air is more dense and therefore opening the cooler will mean most of the cold air stays inside the cooler rather than flowing out and bringing in warm air.
@@madmerlyn I don't agree with you.
@@joewoodchuck3824 doesn't matter if you agree with me, it's physics. The air inside the cooler isn't leaving the cooler so the "cold air" at the bottom isn't magically preventing the food above it from exchanging heat with the tubes below it. Energy likes to spread out, and in a confined space that means any heat ingression spreads out to all of the thermal mass inside the cooler.
@@madmerlyn You haven't actually seen the condensation pattern on the outside of a cooler, have you? Gradually more condensation approaching the bottom of a side than at the top. You can even feel the temperature difference from top to bottom on the sides. It's colder at the bottom than at the top. More temperature difference from ambient to the inside means more loss.
Remember old refrigerators and sometimes the new but small ones? The freezer box is a bare aluminum assembly which freezes the food inside and also cools the entire fridge. It's at the top for a reason. The cool air near to the box falls to the bottom chilling everything on the way down. If the freezer box was at the bottom the upper area would be warmer because heat rises. A parallel to the cooler.
I think we're done here.
@@joewoodchuck3824 if your cooler is forming condensation it's not properly insulated because the outside of it should never get cold enough to cause air to lose temperature quick enough for condensation, and has nothing to do with the contents in the cooler but more to do with the insulation of the cooler itself. And the reason it forms on the bottom portion of the cooler is because 1) the contents of the cooler aren't all floating at the top and 2) natural convection of the air coming into contact with the body of the cooler will draw the cold air OUTSIDE of the cooler down. Also, heat doesn't rise, hot air rises because it becomes less dense than cold air, but inside a sealed cooler there is nowhere for the air to go so everything inside instead pushes towards equilibrium. "I think we're done here" well, maybe, if you're just gonna go with your half-baked idea that "LOL put more cold on top means the heat rises into the cold". Dingus.
]Best "hack" of all . . . . drill a few small holes on both sides of the top and sides of the cooler and spray expanding foam into one side till the foam comes out the holes on the other side. most plastic coolers are hollow. Filling the air gap with foam improves the insulation immensely. Make sure you don't drill the hole all the way through the lid and sides . . . just drill through the first layer. Let the cooler sit until the foam sets and trim off the excess. Also, be careful not to spray to much foam or it will bulge out the lid or sides. I think there was a you tube video of what I'm talking about . . . It's been a while since I've watched so I don't have a link to share . . sorry.
I never buy ice at all when camping anymore, I freeze a case or two of 16 oz water bottles in the freezer 2 weeks before going camping so they get completely frozen solid, also 1) 1 gallon square water bottles for each cooler I take. Also, a frozen orange juice half gallon. I put a gallon milk next to the 1 gallon water bottle to keep that milk ice cold. I mix the water bottles throughout the cooler with my food. No wet melted ice in the cooler, to get the rest of the food wet either. Just take the waters out that are melting the most as your drinking water bottles. Move things around as your trip continues add soda, beer etc.. as you go. The fuller a cooler is the longer it will stay cool and keep things cool. Keep it in the shade also.
If you do want bagged ice keep your bagged ice in a separate cooler from your food so when it melts it won't saturate your food items. It will keep your beverages at the perfect ice cold temperature. To keep the milk extra cold I keep a 1 gallon frozen bottle on one side of the milk and the frozen OJ on the other side.
I like how you think! Also, don't drain the water when using ice! The cold water will help retain a lower temp!
2 weeks?
Man, you sure drink a lot.
Where do you put the hotdogs?
now there is a video that made good sense you deserve a Grammy
Another way to make super, super charged polar tubes is to go to a retail store or gardening center and get a water retaining additive (for the life of me I can't remember what it is called now) and you add water to it and the crystal swell up and stay "inflated" so to speak a long time. Use that with your salt water and you have a good system!
Silicon dioxide?
These tubes..... in my opinion they belong on top, or at least amidst the items to cool, not at the bottom. Also, the grating most likely reduces the height enough that 2 litre bottles no longer can stend upright. Greetings from Germany.
Some Meijer's and Kroger stores carry dry ice. You will need an insulator between it and your food, but it will keep your stuff cold for a good long time. Just don't keep it in an enclosed space with you.
I have never handled dry ice and would want to watch a video on it before I used it in any capacity. Understand you can get permanent frostbite almost immediately if you mishandle it. AND, if I had kids, I just wouldn't use it around them. Not saying don't use it. Just saying that someone should FULLY educate themselves about it before using.
Thank you for teaching me that I didn’t need to click this video
I just watched a guy insolate a lid on a cheap cooler and compare it to the exact same cooler unmodified.
The cooler with the insulated top performed worse, the ice didn't last as long.
Your best bet, is it buy a decent quality cooler because yes, they do make a difference, more than these "hacks" can make up for.
Spray foam insulation's most important attribute is the ability to air seal creating a custom airtight envelope within a structure. Honestly, you're just drilling a hole in your coolers for no apparent reason, because the cooler wall interiors are already airtight.
Finally, somebody stating the obvious!! Thank you.
Coronavirus Pandemic, Day 20: I am so desperate for outdoor activity I am watching videos of cooler hacks.
Very very nice, love these ideas. Good video.
7 drill a small hole and inject the lid with spray foam (Great Stuff).
Claude Smoot that's what I was thinking as well seen another video where they cut one in half and seems the lids are what's not insulated
Claude Smoot I have done that and it’s a great addition
Then buy a cheap styrofoam cooler that fits inside the plastic cooler, put it in and there you have it, two coolers in one
@@Bruxollini That's brilliant
I actually did that, unless you use cheap bullshit spray foam, it's gonna swell the lid to the point it alters its overall shape and no longer seats properly.
good info thanks for the info
All the coolers you showed are Hollow on the walls and the lid and the floor and I'm convinced that if I drill holes and fill all those cavities with non expanding foam they will perform better
I was referring to a product called dap which is a non expanding foam available at places like Walmart or Home Depot
Wow..u just gave me a gr8 idea..ive tried everything short of buying a $400 cooler..ive insulated inside n out..covered with blankets, kept out of sun, frozen water bottles vooler in cooler n still cant get ice to last longer than 2 full days..i may just have to try some dap...its a cheap igloo cooler so wth?? thx
Michael Rodriguez i keep 8 in there at a time rotating them daily..im telling u...i have tried it all except buying an expensive cooler or hooking up a small dorm fridge which i doubt my power station would run 24/7..block ice is hard to come by around here as is dry ice which is a waste anyway for full time use..ive about given up on the whole cooler thing at this point..
The cooler is the greatest invention in the last 500 years. It keeps things cold or it keeps things hot. How does it know?
Polar bear tubes dont fit in your freezer after the racks...
Just don't use the zipties.
I'm not even sure why they did them in the video. The weight on top will keep the tubes still.
You can also drill several holes and pump in expanding foam insulation. Some coolers have insulation in the body, but not in the lid.
Thats the most important tip of all of the them
Yet they missed it.. :(
It makes it worse
Yup, video on RUclips. Makes it worse. The lid has an air gap
Why not just use plain water bottles instead of PVC ? Then it could be used as emergency water.
A water bottle will break eventually and PVC by comparison is indestructible. Maybe you don't care about that
Because it is actually salt water in those pvc tubes. The salt water freezes at a lower temperature so it stays frozen and colder longer. You don’t want to drink that.
@@168Diplomat huh? If salt water freezes at a lower temp than regular H2O that means it will also melt faster than frozen H2O. The salt water will thaw at temps above 28°F where normal water stays frozen until +32°
@@Champaign268 on face value you are correct. But like a lot of things in life reality and text book contradicts each other. Try it and let me know what you think.
good stuff, hats off
Thank you
Hi, I have problem with my cooler box hitch. After applied few times of 3M silicon, it’s still came off. Any other solution? Mine is Coleman cooler box. Thanks
If sweet home Alabama was a cooler
Bro this video literally made me LOL
Is Genius the right word for those hacks.
all these great ideas,
The wire shelving idea is cool, I must try to find that.
Yeah it is "cool".
that was perfect 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻😍
Never heard a bottle opener called a church key before. Had to Google it.
Keep it cool 🍺👍
After I fill my Cooler. I add 2 sheets of aluminum foil to the top and then paper bags on top of the aluminum foil. Really holds the cold. Then throw it all away at the end of the day.
how is that foil lid going to help? any time you open the regular lid you also need to remove the foil to get anything out.
it helps because you get so frustrated opening two lids that you stop caring about the melting ice
I saw other cooler insulation videos where the inside of the lid had the silver insulation stuff permanently attached, so it's not just laying on top of the box in the way.
Michael Rodriguez HES THAT SPECIAL KIND OF FLIPPING STUPID YOU'RE PARENTS WARNED YOU TO STAY AWAY FROM.
No, you're the fool. The video said opening the lid let the cool air out and the solution was the foil lid...but you still have to open the foil lid which STILL lets the cold air out. It may help keep it cold when the lid is closed but it's not a solution.
For whatever reason(it's an unknown phenomena)people,including&especially kids of all ages like to leave a cooler lid sitting opened at random times for no good reason.I believe the reflective material not only helps keep the cooled air in when the lid is left sitting open,but it also helps a cooler stay colder longer and helps the cooler hold ice longer without melting when said lid is closed also. I'm just guessing though.
You don't need the reflective insulation if you just don't open the lid
Encase it in the reflective insulation to increase the time between ice addition.
So how do you remove tubes to freeze them if they are glued in
I've added the first thing in the video (pvc pipe thingy) and styrofoam underneath the cooler lid.
Like the pvc tube idea for ice packs but the last one where you cut the piece of insulating material makes no sense...if you open your lid you’re still going to have to move the insulator to get to the contents
So how do you open the 2nd lid to get your beer out PMSL
One more thing, that insulation they mentioned at the end? Put things ON TOP of that, to keep em dry. Keeping things that ought not be wet dry is a real benefit. "But I put them in a zip lock" bag--not enough. Somehow they end up water logged, put them safe and dry, they will still be cold
I just fill and empty soda bottle with water freeze it, and add a few to my cooler keeps cold for a full day and when it melts that water tastes great
some of the simplest/dumb hacks that just effing work.
What good is putting the tubes on the bottom, when cold air sinks?
great tips.
in my country CHEAP chilly bins are NOT cheap.
the size you showed cost me over $80 3 years ago and was the cheapest available.
another tip if someone has had the meltdown sludge-go to the diy car cleaners and waterblast it clean for $2
Well I have something to do this weekend
So the Polar Bear tubes extend the life of your Cube ice ?
GREAT! now instead of buying a nice cooler, I can spend double the money to build my own.
Putting salt in ice DOES NOT make it last longer. Smh. It lowers the freeze point. Therefore it actually makes the ice melt quicker. That I know for a fact. This is why they throw salt on icy roads. It melts it at a lower temperature
How about little brackets to hold the pvc tubes so they can be frozen and then attached and off again for freezing?
Another cool thing to do would be putting a drain at the bottom of it that you can press a button on and get water out with
That would be a pretty interesting feature.
Who else is mad about the fact didn't cut a cooler in half?
I don't think adding salt to water and freezing it will make the resulting ice last longer. Yes it will be colder, but the refrigerating ability of ice comes it's ability to adsorb heat during the phase change from a solid to a liquid. The energy required for phase change shouldn't be effected by the salt.
Why do they throw ice onto frozen sidewalks to melt it?
@@soof3993 They throw salt onto frozen sidewalks because it reduces the temperature at which freezing occurs, the ice then absorbs heat from it's environment and melts. But the heat of fusion remains unchanged, so the heat capacity of the ice is unchanged. Basically there's two different factors involved, the ice temperature and it's heat capacity. The salt only changes one of them.
Those were good hacks
Why not drill holes in the top of the lid, fill it with water (75% or 4/5). Seal the holes anput the lid in the freezer.
Hey guys, take it from an old hunter/fisherman my Coleman Extreme keeps ice as long as my Yeti. So when you put that Yeti sticker on your truck or suv you are tell the knowing world you are stupid, or you have more money than brain.
I have a coleman extreme and it sucks. Ice is always melted by the end of the day. I've seen other people having the same results as you, so maybe I got a dud?
@@joshwexler658 Try icing down your cooler for 24 hours before using it if your going on a trip... it may help
@@joshwexler658 must be using it wrong no cooler ever has ice melt the same dam day
@@JohnSmith-mg5ve it's a cooler. It has a lid that is open or closed. It's not rocket science. And yes, I can determine the difference between water in its liquid and solid state. And by the end of the day, it has changed from it's solid state to liquid state. Using it wrong? Like what, I had it upside down with the lid open? I can't stand people like you who think because they haven't witnessed something it couldn't have possibly happened
@Orion Beg all you want, fact is fact I have both. I have stopped wasting time and ice on my Yeti. Pretend to be the big shot if your stupid ass wishes to.
What about adding foam into the hollow top?
How do you freeze the tubes when they're zip tied to the false floor?
Pop off the zipties with a sliver of tin to slip in and "releace" the ziptie tab that locks it closed.
Careful not to cut your self as that tin will be razor sharp.
Or try another thin yet sterdy thing like flat head eye glass screw driver.
@@Xanthro2 I understand you can release zip ties if you really want to. It's much easier to accomplish on those large zip ties that are 3/8" wide. The small ones not so much, and occasionally the "locking" mechanism will no longer lock once it has been bent back to release.
@@Guillotines_For_Globalists aye. I dont think about much as I got one of them huge bags of like 200 tinny zipties, but I also got good at releacing them so it dont happen to me much.
Btw, love the name and pfp. Agreed!
Some good suggestions. Worth the watch.
Waste of time... just bring the fridge and plug it in to a tree.
That made me laugh. It takes a a lot to make me laugh.
No, you plug it into a currant bush!
........ you own me a shirt and a keyboard
rs717.pbsrc.com/albums/ww173/prestonjjrtr/Smileys/Smiley25-1.gif~c200
Haha I cracked up
Lmfao
There is no inulation in the cheap coolers lids. Drill holes and spray some foam insulation inside the lids.
WHAT is the ratio of salt to water before adding to pvc?
Thank you this video is just what I was looking for. I subscribed.
Well could have gone just a little further with stuff you had right there, laws of energy are How do you need to cool/freeze? Top/sides, bottom of cooler are R1 outside if darker attract's more heat! White contact paper on outside or store covered in shade out of wind! #2 heat rises/cold sinks, so store off ground. Line wholecooler with Reflex or just cheap insulation & tin foil make in side into 2-3/4 compartments use frozen milk/1-2ltr jugs the top insulation make into R/L sides with extra thick insulation on top or paper! We tyoff or stuff to inside! Then you can include dry ice to the mix! I don't ever use those pvc things, but I do have the knowledge now! I do recommend the grills!
What is the physics behind the Polar Bear tubes?
You could also drill a small hole in the lid and fill it full of expanding foam.
I just watched a guy insolate a lid on a cheap cooler and compare it to the exact same cooler unmodified.
The cooler with the insulated top performed worse, the ice didn't last as long.
@@DefinitelyNotSpam It seemed thermodynamically sound I must have been wrong no biggie.
@@kevinbarriger8215 Honestly, I thought the same.
People in the comments were saying it was because the foam was still curing (and giving off heat), but he did tests days later
My only thought is maybe it was keeping the heat in, since heat rises.
Not sure, I only watched the one guy, might watch more and see if their results are the same
AMAZING! love it love it!
How about keeping the lid from breaking off on cheap coolers every single one i have owned gets broken off lol.
Check Amazon. I have a 15 year old Coleman 5 day. On the third set of hinges. About 3 bucks a set.
Good.
how many freezers are big enough to hold the tubes and shelving ? be spending more in ties than beer and weed.
how much salt? tblspn?
It was difficult but I was able to climax to this video
isnt 3/4s full 75% not 80%?
Brown Trout that's what I came to the comments to find out... "What's with the line? What's with the 80%? How much salt? Tell me these things!" Lol
Brown Trout more like 2/3.
Brown Trout. True. Lol.
Jeremy Campbell. 2/3 = abt. 66.667% I hope that helps.
lmfao
short and simple no long winded speech
And one of the best things you can do you should add to this list is spray foam inside the lid cheap coolers have a Hollow lid and your yetis are foam insulated at the top drill a hole fill it up and you're good to go