Gravity sucks. Just when you're flyin' high and soarin' like a bird,
enter Gravity to kill the buzz.
All along I've been assuming, incorrectly, that the dual hoses in these portable air conditioners are to cycle the
room with fresh air.
Bzzzzzzzzzt! Wrong answer! The dual hoses are there to cycle the
equipment with fresh air.
That means that while the
air conditioner is breathing, the
room is not.
Therefore, the portable air conditioner is really no better than the mini split in my situation.
However, not all is lost. I learned a bit about air circulation in the past couple of weeks. I also learned to simplify my thinking about my challenges:
- 1. I need something to keep the room comfortably cool.
2. I need something to supply me with fresh air.
These are
two separate an distinct challenges and
they do not have to be accomplished with one system.
Like a ton of bricks, it hit me -- my
ventilation requirement is to address my
lack of window. My undertanding of building codes is that I can make up for the lack of window with a mechanical ventilation system, adequate lighting, emergency lighting, and a smoke detector, provided the room not be used for sleeping purposes. Two documents that illustrate this are
Natural Light for Home Theater, City of Golden, Colorado, Building Division, Policies & Procedures and
City of Boise, Idaho, "IRC Code Section R303: Light & Ventilation".
My city uses a different set of model codes, but I'm pretty sure they're similar. This is something I will need to verify.
So, since the MovinCool system is "getting up there in price" to get close to the cost of a mini split, why not go ahead and
do the mini split, and then come up with a simple ventillation system to cycle air in and out of the room on demand?
My room will be around 1,300 cubic feet (that's a liberal estimate). If I aim for a full air exchange every half hour (the greater requirement of the two referenced above), that's 650 cubic feet every 30 minutes, or a little over 20 CFM, an easy level to reach. I'd actually want it to be much better than that.
The challenge will be
allowing air to be exchanged with the outside world without allowing sound to leake out to the outside world.
For simplicity's sake, I'd prefer that the ducts penetrate to the outside in the area
between my leaves, between the doors. However, there may not be enough space in this area to accomplish this successfully. If so, then the ducts could run the depth of the house and follow the same path that the mini split lines would to the southeast corner (about 30-40 feet).
The cool thing (no pun intended) about this solution is that, during colder months, I may not have to run A/C at all -- I can simply run the ventilation system to pump 50-60 degree (Fahrenheit) air into the room.
So much for the $500 air conditioner idea...
Dan, on the phone yesterday you said you had some ideas for a duct silencer. Perhaps you can share them now, as they may be helpful in coming up with a plan for my ventilation ducts.