• @[email protected]
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    fedilink
    17 months ago

    That’s a clever arrangement! Thanks for sharing. I’m in Colorado and we get dry enough that evaporative cooling is effective, but home came with AC, which means everything just gets dry and you static shock all your electronics to death as your power bill spins up to infinity. I never considered that one could have a dual system to switch between. What is your temperature differential with the evap operational? 20 degrees or so?

    • @halcyoncmdr
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      English
      17 months ago

      Yeah about 15-20 normally, but can get up around 30 around peak summer with zero humidity. Above about 100 outside though it just can’t keep up and the AC is needed even with low humidity.

      So basically above 100 and above about 40% or so humidity, the AC is needed, otherwise the evap cools better and is a lot cheaper to run.