I'm hopeful about these! Hopeful I can make a cheaper, lower-power alternative to CPAP blowers that doesn't require a separate fan driver board, and lower the barrier to entry for remote cooling. What do you think? Will it work? Do you want one?
i definitely want one, the main problem with cpap setups (or at least getting one) is i have the option to spend on the cpap blower, or nothing. there is no choice between how much power you need, you either get a cpap blower or no cpap cooling
I want to go CPAP a some point to make my printer head lighter but the noise is a concern so having the option to DIY it is so cool, like if it does not work for me it is still the coolest project ever
I've definitely thought about multistage options, although we'll need to see what they can do in single stages first. I have a range of sizes and power levels to play with 😁
@@jamespray oh wow, that must move some air! Definitely intrigued to see what you can squeeze out of these and if they produce good static pressure. Full CPAP fan just seems a little bit too much effort and the roborock fans are a crapshoot.
@@ZozobraDoom Testing on the 10025 version is promising so far (performance of easily-powered setup matches the case fan conversion I've been daily driving for a few years now), and I'm close to completing the 12025, which I think will be pretty performant! I do feel confident these will offer a viable alternative to the CPAP blower and roborock options, with a much wider range of cost, power, noise, and output choices. I think the main tradeoff/consideration vs CPAP and roborock may turn out to be the larger physical footprint of these designs, but for those with space, I hope these will cover both quiet/easy power+control and no-holds-barred airflow use cases.
I'm hopeful about these! Hopeful I can make a cheaper, lower-power alternative to CPAP blowers that doesn't require a separate fan driver board, and lower the barrier to entry for remote cooling. What do you think? Will it work? Do you want one?
i definitely want one, the main problem with cpap setups (or at least getting one) is i have the option to spend on the cpap blower, or nothing. there is no choice between how much power you need, you either get a cpap blower or no cpap cooling
I want to go CPAP a some point to make my printer head lighter but the noise is a concern so having the option to DIY it is so cool, like if it does not work for me it is still the coolest project ever
Definitely want one!
Interested!
Looking forward to it James. Have you thought about using this for your multi-stage concept? Can't imagine the pressure with 3 of these!
I've definitely thought about multistage options, although we'll need to see what they can do in single stages first. I have a range of sizes and power levels to play with 😁
10025 framless blower?
Well-spotted! Also 12025s
@@jamespray oh wow, that must move some air! Definitely intrigued to see what you can squeeze out of these and if they produce good static pressure. Full CPAP fan just seems a little bit too much effort and the roborock fans are a crapshoot.
@@ZozobraDoom Testing on the 10025 version is promising so far (performance of easily-powered setup matches the case fan conversion I've been daily driving for a few years now), and I'm close to completing the 12025, which I think will be pretty performant! I do feel confident these will offer a viable alternative to the CPAP blower and roborock options, with a much wider range of cost, power, noise, and output choices. I think the main tradeoff/consideration vs CPAP and roborock may turn out to be the larger physical footprint of these designs, but for those with space, I hope these will cover both quiet/easy power+control and no-holds-barred airflow use cases.
Can't wait to see the effectiveness of this system.
I really need an entry level, quieter remote cooling solution!