L
LJB
kind of interesting. would love to hear/read some opinions from the wider community.
part 1: http://www.urbangardenmagazine.com/...ht=ajaxSearch_highlight+ajaxSearch_highlight1
part 2: http://www.urbangardenmagazine.com/...ht=ajaxSearch_highlight+ajaxSearch_highlight1
I might have the opportunity to test this formula (details in part 1) in the coming weeks.
Was this originally covered in the Overgrow.com FAQ?
part 1: http://www.urbangardenmagazine.com/...ht=ajaxSearch_highlight+ajaxSearch_highlight1
part 2: http://www.urbangardenmagazine.com/...ht=ajaxSearch_highlight+ajaxSearch_highlight1
The whole room size thing has been a complete red herring over the years. It was a general rule of thumb that hid many details and wasn’t really based on anything but history and lots of other loose rules-of-thumb. It tended to break down in unusual cases and nobody could explain why. We can’t find a basis for it anyplace. It doesn’t make any sense that a 2 cubic meter box with 600 watts needs any more/less cooling than a 35 cubic meter room with a 600 watt light. It just takes longer for the oven to get up to temperature but they both need to get rid of the same amount of heat in the end. A joule going in must be balanced by a joule coming out or the temperature will go up.
The formula shown above has been found in several other places on the web, once you know where to look. It’s basic bread-and-butter info for people that do cooling for desktop computers.
The formula works because it is based on energy transfer fundamentals. It ignores heat loss or gain through the side walls, but you can get more complicated and model that kind of heat also. The effect you point out is one facet of the facts it is based on.
The key idea we like is that it is temperature difference that matters, not absolute temperature. This means the same fan setting will give you the same difference no matter what your inlet temperature is. I’ve been thinking about this a fair amount and realised that the formula is the basis for a crude hot wire anemometer. That’s a thing that measures airspeed by measuring how much a hot wire is cooled by the air as it goes by.
I might have the opportunity to test this formula (details in part 1) in the coming weeks.
Was this originally covered in the Overgrow.com FAQ?