camping fans

camping fans
What is a good cooling option for the site?

I planned a camping trip coming up mid-July, and I expect it to be hot. I am looking for an economic benefit (<$ 100) opportunity to cool the tent at night. I recently purchased a misting fan, but was disappointed by the lack of cooling water quantity (Off the tent was soaked). Anyone familiar with evaporative coolers (and have they made much water). Other ideas cooling of the night?

Just a few thoughts I had, since I camped in the heat, a lot. I can not do much since I backpack, it was only last year I bought a cheap personal fan. If you can get one blowing in one end of a thin tube (like plastic bags they put in newspapers, taped end to end), turn the fan at the top of the tent and blow hot air outside. You could pin the exhaust inside a screen. Draw in outside air through the screen at the back. If you can stand the wind, have a small fan to blow directly on you. To protect your tent of the sun during the day, try one or more of these emergency blankets in plastic foil. Swamp coolers (evaporative) not working in very dry air, and the need for a regular supply of food and water. He can sit outside tent and be channeled into the idea of the thin tube. This cools the air flow, so that the cooling air must circulate through the tent – It can be bottled. Check the power and water consumption and make sure it'll work in your climate. Coolers can cool and dehumidify. Some small models can sit inside the tent with pipes going to a cooler sitting outside, but they use a lot of ice and need constant power (for a pump to bring fluid from the chest cold and a fan for the heat exchanger inside). I heard that low prices do not work. If it works, you must provide for the drip of condensate. True conditioners consume more power, but that work best, assuming a plug-in camping. Your best value is the smallest unit you can find in a thrift store, as goodwill, or a store closing as Ollie's. Set it outside and supplying air into the tent. Except a tent unusually high, it will probably be too cold to close the tent with a second return air duct to the unit (which should be a source folding are injured each), then you can just leave it blow through. This cool and dehumidify. Air conditioners go as small as 4000 BTU. For a small tent, you can get as low as 1,000 BTU air conditioner looking for a "wall of air" is to cool equipment electronic cabinets. They are smaller and consume less energy, but they are not cheap unless you can find a surplus or used, and they are still about 50 pounds. The smaller you go, the more complicated it gets. To a certain extent. You need a steady supply of compressed air to perform a vortex tube, but they are also for cooling the housing. Put air compressed into one end, get two streams of air – a warm and ventilated to the outside, the other to incredibly cold. They shout, but they are also sold with silencer. Do not even think to get one without. If your tent is small enough, try to circulate the air one of these refrigerators cube using ducts and a small fan. It is in your price range, and you can sometimes pick up free refrigerators if you cruise around town during a major element to the day. Setting sort of heat exchanger fins of the cooler. If you are ambitious, cutting off most of the cases around the stomach, being careful not to disturb the tubes. Add the heat exchanger fins. Pop rivet what you need the case, the addition of a fan. And a second fan coils on the back. That sounds like a beautiful project. It dropwise. It could also ice. So? Space heat exchanger fins further away. What do you charge?

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