@SevengersKiSenaOfficialSo? The point of this cooling system is to avoid the heating created on the outside by AC units, which in turn maked the outdoor more unbearable and pushing more people indoor with more AC Reliance. A small solar pump doesn't do that
@SevengersKiSenaOfficial *_I'm sorry, this is going to be looooong._* *_You've been warned.._* Do you know what the wattage and cost it would take to move enough water over those tubes in a month to cool your home off? I would say less than ½ of the cost it would take to run your energy efficient refrigerator in your home. *_....OR...._* You could let mother nature at her finest do the work for you instead of using electric. You would need or use... *_Gravity.._* *_Water-flow.._* *_Water-wheel.._* Remember how water-wheels were used in flour mills from many years ago in the past? The only major cost in the beginning would be... *_• Labor cost.._* *_• Cost of material.._* But if you were installing a new A/C unit in your home, that would cost anywhere between....what $5-7K, hell maybe even more. That's not counting... *_• Repair cost.._* *_• Replacement of the unit if is beyond repair.._* *_• Cost in monthly energy bill.._* All you need to worry about in THIS cooling device cooling your home would be replacement of the.. *_• The tubes.._* *_• The water-flow.._* *_• Material in the water-wheel.._* Which you could do by yourself, with a little bit of.. *_• Handyman know-how.._* *_• TH-cam.._* *_• Tools.._* *_• Elbow grease.._* *_• Materials.._* Which would be more cost less than a A/C unit in your home, because you would need a technician to come out to your home too... *_• Maintenance.._* *_• Replacement of your A/C unit.._* But also remember, using mother nature way, your monthly electric bill...your monthly energy cost would be $0. Plus, you would have that beautiful sound of flowing water in your home..
We use the same principle here in Arizona pushing air through saturated material, such as straw or fabric. Call them evaporative coolers. Works great in areas with very low humidity only
You are right. It only works when humidity is low. In India dry heat is only 3 months, followed by 4 months of Monsoon rainy season so evaporative won't work then.
@@Pww642 I've heard Ground Water cooling is better in such climates. Do you guys experiment with it and what about solar? Is it feasible there? In India, the Government is heavily promoting Solar and we have these electric meters, which subtract the units produced from solar cells and sent to the grid to reduce overall bills.
It's in a dry environment so humidity is fine and mosquitoes can't reproduce in moving water. Add a filter to the pump and you also get rid of the mold
@@brandonsheffield9873 not every technology needs to be universal to be useful. It's meaningless to ask what if everyone switched to this because everyone isn't going to switch to this.
200 years old British made distt court building still feel cool in summers.without water.they use flow of air intake small and pass through galery which is connect to every room.good ventilation is the key.
Looks fine for now. But it will have moss and alage growth on surface. Later the air circulating will carry its spores, eventually damaging the house hold items and very irritating to those who suffers from allergy.
Mosquito🦟 NEED still stagnant water to lay their eggs and with moving water that wouldn't be a problem. If this device had fish 🐠🐟 in the pool in the bottom and circulated the water, again no mosquitoes🦟.
@@Mommapunkinyou tell me that there will not be stagnant water in dozens of places in that thing, and I'll tell you you don't know what you are talking about
yes, but depends. In my region, the water pressure already high out of the pipe. So, with that height it feels nothing for natural pressure. So no electric is use
These style coolers do work great in low to medium humidity climates. Though they can be extremely unhealthy if not monitored and cleaned very regularly.
Was thinking that the model could be improved by having all the tubes connected to some pipes that go up high enough to experiment with the corona motor, its on youtube, also because the pipe is high enough it will be able to turn the little fans wirelessly, the idea would be to have the pressure difference in the pole be more isolated so the suction in the tubes is remote but keeps the water from falling out so fast and may cause more action in the tubes, also attempting to use a fog catcher to run the water using the ancient power of that screw deal to get the water back into a place where it could evaporate, plus using aerogel inside a peltier is something I just thought of, an maybe starlight for the hot stuff, also thought of coming up with a tesla tube that flips a 180 just flips around, an 1 that does the same thing without flipping, and maybe using buoyant switches and canals somewhere maybe the frequency may have an effect
@@MrGarthboy that's a very enthusiastic concept you just explained and I'm curious if that's something you just thought of right now in a few minutes or something youve been putting together for somr time piece by piece on paper or just in your head? Some pretty interesting concepts I can honestly say I don't have enough knowledge 2 immediately say it won't work but I have enough knowledge of all the things you mentioned to understand what you are getting at and I am very intrigued. Much love
@DetroitFettyghost I just thought of some of it but ya I had to learn as I went along I just thought yesterday about putting starlight or aerogel in a peltier unit, and the switching without movement tesla tubes, maybe memory metal, or pressure activated, surfboard stuff for buoyancy switches great for canals thought of decade ago, the quartz electric from the lighter deal might make a good switch possibly help power some the induction motor energy transfer during a part is wireless.
water evaporates, which gives cooling effect by losing latent heat. So you need to recharge water as well. this is just another version of Swamp cooler.
@@megharaj4989 he wrote just to keep it moist, it will dry up in few mins ( if humidity is low ) yes drip method will keep it moist continuously. TBH heat exchange is better in grass root mesh panels, ( due to increased surface area ) it is better in cooling & bio degradable as well.
In my dad's house, he had a fountain running outside his room. The circulating water inside the pipes within one of his room's walls was enough to cool the room within 25-27 degrees C, well below the ambient temperature outside which is around 33 to, nowadays fucking up to 40 degrees with stupidly high humidity. I was very surprised to find his room cool even in midday. He doesn't run into humidity problems because the fountain was outside.
Evaporative cooling can only be used in low humidity environments due to the way in which this type of cooler works. It uses the specific heat of evaporation, but humidifies the air while it does it. Typically they do use electricity in order to pump water from the basin below, up above the evaporative medium, and also for a fan to blow the air through the system.
This could potentially work if you enclosed the space around the tubes so that the water running over the tubes is not exposed to air and light. The interior volume would need to fill up with water which would also remove oxygen. Then the water is separate from the outside environment and doesn't contribute to humidity. And maybe use aluminum tubes which have excellent thermal conductivity (and are not porous).
It was already there in Fatehpir Sikri for a long time before Shahjahan. One can see the remains of the structure. The water used to be pour manually by servants and were placed where there was more windy.
It's exactly an inefficient Water cooler. In older times in Rajasthan they used desert grass, moist by water on windows, the same grass used in older desert coolers. That idea is actually more simple and effective.
Cooling of bee hives is through fanning of the wings of the bees. It has nothing to do with the hexagonal shape of the individual cells. That is merely an efficient use of space and provides greater strength to the structure. The individual cells are plugged with pupae, therefore no air passes through them. The cooling system here exhibits none of the mechanics of a bee hive other than a passing similarity. However it is still an effective way of cooling the air and has been practicing for a long time in the greenhouse farming industries among others. Nothing new here.
Bees flap wings to evaporate moisture from their honey and wax. That evaporation is what cools it. aka.Evaporative cooling. Which is exactly what happens here. The hexagonal shape thing was probably something the narrator pulled out from their ignorance. I have watched an older long format video on them, they don't say anything about 'hexagonal shape', which is exactly why it's not in hexagonal shape. But their shape does have significance, as their inlet opening is larger than the outlet to create Burnauli's cooling mechanism
Only good in open outdoor areas. Mold and algae will appear inevitable and they pose serious health hazard especially in enclosed areas. They also need to make sure that all surfaces have no stagnant water to prevent mosquitoes breeding there.
@@shironoyami7002 the question should be, "will it bring greater cost benefits?", because either way we are going to use some kind of cooling technology, so a sustainability and affordability should be the things to consider
@@Omer1996E.C yeah this looks very interesting in a glance, but can't be made functionally in smaller sizes, can't be used in every part of the world and can't be used for household.
It required electricity for the water circulation pump and the fan. Saves the compressor electricity through. So surely cutoff atleast 50% electricity for sure. And if the part of fountain water flow then save that electricity too.
Water is renewable, but electricity is produced from burning coal (majorly). The amount of electricity required to pump water every now and then vs that required for AC is what gives this idea a positive nod.
Humid condition were never for human living , just becos British developed your costal humid cities in last 100 years ... You fallen in trap of it ... Ot else only balance temp condition good for human living
@@AtulSingh-fv4uq wrong , you are wrong ,only river basins inhabited by golden civilization , your enslaved civilization dieing in humid concentration camps
But u need consider the shape of those tubes as its circumferential area low to high to low . Which intern high velocity to high pressure . That high pressure gas is cooled with water . Then it will go out from high pressure to hogh pressure which even forther reduces the temp . Thats simple yet effective .👍
1. Less electricity used only pump. 2. Cools the air in the room. 3. No need to close door. 4. Lots of water needed. 5. Increase humidity in room. 6. Damage electronic equipment if in water proof close box
Another solution- Similarly structure without water, terracotta pipes with large holes on outer side and small holes on inner side...As the air passes from large side to small side of pipe, the air gets cooled due to compression...Mesh on both sides of the pipes can avoid mosquito breeding... Solar connected motor can also be used if water is required... Energy and Water is abundant in nature...we don't have technology to get it...This is a very good project...I see most of the comments talking about problems...Good thing here is we know what are the problems...All we need to do is to find smart solutions...
@@striker44 Well, it looks like you did learn that physics much. The air here isn't just contained in a box as pressurized. It's moving. And to know how moving air here is cooled down, look up something called bernaulli's principle 'faster air moves lower its pressure'. And these tubes have inlet larger than the out let, meaning the air particles moving through the smaller office will be faster, thus cooling the surrounding. Put your hand on air leaking from a tube tire puncture and see if that air is hot or cool
1920's tech. Our church in Florida which was built in 1938 has the original cypress wood swamp cooler. It is 8x8x10 feet and cools a large church on hot Florida days.
No radiator is very different. The radiator is a closed system where two fluids do not mix with each other. In this arrangement, however, there's mixing of two fluids. But this is going to be a maintenance nightmare. Not to forget the humidity aspect.
bhai, use convergent tubes, thats conic tubes, when air flowes from wider to narrorwer area it cools down by 5 to 8 degree, so your solution will become more effective.
@@k0nanick so it is useless unless it was installed near high mountain with cool freash and clean water stream on top of it, then why do i need cooling air if i was live in that kind of place?
Those people complaining or criticizing the idea and the possible problems. You already created the problem without even trying it, instead of complaining, why not give your suggestions? What can we do to make it better? You know, let's all be positive. And i see this invention as eco-friendly/ less damaging
Is it really something new? Is it really eco-friendly? Is it really effective? The same effect can be got if we just wet a cloth and hang it on our windows. Making terracota means burning things (hence pollution) to harden the clay. Also, the continuous flow of water means electricity and water wastage. Also, this won't work in humid areas. So, we can see through the entire idea being just an old wine in a new expensive bottle with a good marketing.
A natural air cooling system could be created using terracotta pots and waterfalls. The pots' porosity allows for evaporative cooling, lowering the temperature of air passing over the water. A small turbine could harness the energy of the falling water to generate electricity, powering a water pump and purification system. This closed-loop design would recycle the water, ensuring continuous operation and water conservation. Solar panels could supplement the system's power, resulting in an environmentally-friendly and potentially self-sustaining cooling solution.
I got news for you we've been using grass swamp coolers for long long time but that kind of cooling only works in low humidity if it gets real high humidity end up with mold in your walls and in your house
هذا الاختراع يلزمه شيئان الاول مصدر ماء مستمر والثاني اما منزل يدور حول محوره حتى يوجهه باتجاه الريح او الخيار الثاني ان يكون مصدر الهواء يأتي من اتجاه واحد لا يتغير
This is to avoid harmfull gases which comes from AC , yes this also needs electricity but this does not produce the harmfull gases like chlorChlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
The problem is the regions with high relative humidity, since evaporation will be very minimum and that is why cooolers doesn’t work in these regions.. Example Kolkata and far east..humid and hot at the same time
These guys are amazing!❤ everyone from around the world should learn from them!!!😘😘😘 deff can help with the climate too.. if that is not mainly obvious! ❤️❤️❤️🔥🌟🙏🏻🌟🔥❤️❤️❤️
It's not air conditioner It's a swamp cooler It's works differently from normal AC and swamp cooled are only effective in some of weather area (less effective in hot humid area)
Humidity of the cooled air passing through these terracotta tubes is increased. It doesn't help if the relative humidity levels in the room is high, and may encourage fungal infestation under the right conditions.
Evaporative cooling is not a new invention. It has been there since ages. I have seen vervain (called "Wala") curtains on the side on a fan boxed with water container at the top and water seeping on those vervain curtains. Those did wonderful job.
Meanwhile water pump 🙂 running without electricity
Nice one.😂😂😂
It's built near flowing rivers
@@nandanbhat629 that makes it even more useless
@@nandanbhat629 how if under waterfall?😂
Yehi comment karne aaya tha...... But aapne to pehle hi pel rakha hai 😅 👍🏼
The water bill exceeded electricity bill😂😂😂😂
No water is re circulated
@SevengersKiSenaOfficialSo? The point of this cooling system is to avoid the heating created on the outside by AC units, which in turn maked the outdoor more unbearable and pushing more people indoor with more AC Reliance. A small solar pump doesn't do that
@SevengersKiSenaOfficial
*_I'm sorry, this is going to be looooong._* *_You've been warned.._*
Do you know what the wattage and cost it would take to move enough water over those tubes in a month to cool your home off? I would say less than ½ of the cost it would take to run your energy efficient refrigerator in your home.
*_....OR...._*
You could let mother nature at her finest do the work for you instead of using electric. You would need or use...
*_Gravity.._*
*_Water-flow.._*
*_Water-wheel.._*
Remember how water-wheels were used in flour mills from many years ago in the past?
The only major cost in the beginning would be...
*_• Labor cost.._*
*_• Cost of material.._*
But if you were installing a new A/C unit in your home, that would cost anywhere between....what $5-7K, hell maybe even more. That's not counting...
*_• Repair cost.._*
*_• Replacement of the unit if is beyond repair.._*
*_• Cost in monthly energy bill.._*
All you need to worry about in THIS cooling device cooling your home would be replacement of the..
*_• The tubes.._*
*_• The water-flow.._*
*_• Material in the water-wheel.._*
Which you could do by yourself, with a little bit of..
*_• Handyman know-how.._*
*_• TH-cam.._*
*_• Tools.._*
*_• Elbow grease.._*
*_• Materials.._*
Which would be more cost less than a A/C unit in your home, because you would need a technician to come out to your home too...
*_• Maintenance.._*
*_• Replacement of your A/C unit.._*
But also remember, using mother nature way, your monthly electric bill...your monthly energy cost would be $0.
Plus, you would have that beautiful sound of flowing water in your home..
Fools don't know that a small pump consumes far less electricity that a AC condenser.
Using the solar energy boss
"Inspired by the HEXAGONAL shape of bee hive"
Let's make them Circular tube
🤣💯
Because circular tubes are easy and cheaper to make.
I thought they were talking about voids
😂😂
If it was hexagonal, it would be hard for water to pass
We use the same principle here in Arizona pushing air through saturated material, such as straw or fabric. Call them evaporative coolers. Works great in areas with very low humidity only
You are right. It only works when humidity is low. In India dry heat is only 3 months, followed by 4 months of Monsoon rainy season so evaporative won't work then.
I live in Phoenix and evap coolers don’t help much when it’s 120 degrees out. At that point you really need AC.
@@Pww642 I've heard Ground Water cooling is better in such climates. Do you guys experiment with it and what about solar? Is it feasible there? In India, the Government is heavily promoting Solar and we have these electric meters, which subtract the units produced from solar cells and sent to the grid to reduce overall bills.
It's very common in Pakistan but it doesn't work during monsoon, actually it would make the humidity worse
Swamp cooler 😊
"This AC doesn't require electricity"
The water pump: Yeah right, I'm a perpetual motion engine
Does this need fan to blow water from behind
A water pump of the size required would use a fraction of a typical air conditioner.
Violation of 1st LAW of thermodynamics 😂
@@moizattaria4051he probably meant "Air Cooler" by AC rather than standard "Air Conditioner".
😂The water bill
still uses electricity
Fungus, humidity, mosquitoes entered chat
It's in a dry environment so humidity is fine and mosquitoes can't reproduce in moving water. Add a filter to the pump and you also get rid of the mold
@@hawks9142What about water loss? If everyone switched to this, dry places prone to droughtn will suffer greatly.
@@brandonsheffield9873 not every technology needs to be universal to be useful. It's meaningless to ask what if everyone switched to this because everyone isn't going to switch to this.
@@brandonsheffield9873 rain harvesting
Just humidity is enough to make it unusable in house environment
Lady: this is a air conditioner
Me: this is triggering my trypophobia.
I just said that same thing!😂 this thing puts me in a bad mood. Weird feeling in my temple.
Sahi baat
200 years old British made distt court building still feel cool in summers.without water.they use flow of air intake small and pass through galery which is connect to every room.good ventilation is the key.
Where it is
@@Hleagh india
Looks fine for now. But it will have moss and alage growth on surface. Later the air circulating will carry its spores, eventually damaging the house hold items and very irritating to those who suffers from allergy.
Mosquitoes may file..not a long lasting idea
Mosquito🦟 NEED still stagnant water to lay their eggs and with moving water that wouldn't be a problem. If this device had fish 🐠🐟 in the pool in the bottom and circulated the water, again no mosquitoes🦟.
Instead plant do it's job indoor as well out door plants
@@Mommapunkinyou tell me that there will not be stagnant water in dozens of places in that thing, and I'll tell you you don't know what you are talking about
Use copper & zinc ions
Humidity has entered the chat, but I love it, would have one in a large greenhouse.
Or the desert.
Yeah theybshould focys on the sun instead solar power since there is lotsbof sun there...
And bettervinsulation of heat humidity
Not suitable for everywhere but nice concept indeed.
@@thebeautifulanimalexactly. Depening on the environment it may work out just right.
If it's humid and heat environment... Mold is a hazard
90% humidity says hi.
That electric water pump 😂. Dang!
Don't skip engineering classes guys 😂😂
Ancient people were great than today so called engineer ( unemployed)
@@mayankraj2222 aww butthurt are you 😂😂
@@aakashr4974 no unemployed engineer 🤣
Bhakth@@mayankraj2222
if you are gonna crtitcize someone than you should at least provide a valid logical argument to support your statement.
Still gonna need power for the water pump. 😊
yes, but depends. In my region, the water pressure already high out of the pipe. So, with that height it feels nothing for natural pressure. So no electric is use
Literally sun bruh, the water falls from above and is collected
But u still need a pump to circulate and reuse the same water we can't just waste water right!
Not a ram pump
Solar panels are useful for the power supply of the motor..
Hexagonal! Like beehives! Now.. where me hundreds of round terracotta pipes?
Everything fails posts June when Humidity walks in. AC ROCKS
These style coolers do work great in low to medium humidity climates. Though they can be extremely unhealthy if not monitored and cleaned very regularly.
Oh yeah that's a good point you could get all kinds of mildew and bacteria growing in there pretty quickly.....💯
Was thinking that the model could be improved by having all the tubes connected to some pipes that go up high enough to experiment with the corona motor, its on youtube, also because the pipe is high enough it will be able to turn the little fans wirelessly, the idea would be to have the pressure difference in the pole be more isolated so the suction in the tubes is remote but keeps the water from falling out so fast and may cause more action in the tubes, also attempting to use a fog catcher to run the water using the ancient power of that screw deal to get the water back into a place where it could evaporate, plus using aerogel inside a peltier is something I just thought of, an maybe starlight for the hot stuff, also thought of coming up with a tesla tube that flips a 180 just flips around, an 1 that does the same thing without flipping, and maybe using buoyant switches and canals somewhere maybe the frequency may have an effect
@@MrGarthboy that's a very enthusiastic concept you just explained and I'm curious if that's something you just thought of right now in a few minutes or something youve been putting together for somr time piece by piece on paper or just in your head? Some pretty interesting concepts I can honestly say I don't have enough knowledge 2 immediately say it won't work but I have enough knowledge of all the things you mentioned to understand what you are getting at and I am very intrigued. Much love
@DetroitFettyghost I just thought of some of it but ya I had to learn as I went along I just thought yesterday about putting starlight or aerogel in a peltier unit, and the switching without movement tesla tubes, maybe memory metal, or pressure activated, surfboard stuff for buoyancy switches great for canals thought of decade ago, the quartz electric from the lighter deal might make a good switch possibly help power some the induction motor energy transfer during a part is wireless.
@@MrGarthboy It sounds good but can you explain in more easy way so that it can be applied
You don't need this much water, you just need to keep it moist. 😂😂
Looks cool
water evaporates, which gives cooling effect by losing latent heat. So you need to recharge water as well.
this is just another version of Swamp cooler.
@@revzzriderwhat he means is, you don't need flowing water, just driping source would be enough
Water is more than we believe it to be, solid, gas, liquid, and its fourth state.
@@megharaj4989 he wrote just to keep it moist, it will dry up in few mins ( if humidity is low ) yes drip method will keep it moist continuously.
TBH heat exchange is better in grass root mesh panels, ( due to increased surface area ) it is better in cooling & bio degradable as well.
In my dad's house, he had a fountain running outside his room. The circulating water inside the pipes within one of his room's walls was enough to cool the room within 25-27 degrees C, well below the ambient temperature outside which is around 33 to, nowadays fucking up to 40 degrees with stupidly high humidity. I was very surprised to find his room cool even in midday. He doesn't run into humidity problems because the fountain was outside.
Evaporative cooling can only be used in low humidity environments due to the way in which this type of cooler works. It uses the specific heat of evaporation, but humidifies the air while it does it.
Typically they do use electricity in order to pump water from the basin below, up above the evaporative medium, and also for a fan to blow the air through the system.
R.I.P Trypophobia 😂
yes ahhh
Was looking for this comment 🙂
Looking for this 😂
@@krishnakalakonda2085😂
A what phobia?? First time I've heard 😂
Im concerned of this has a potential to be mosquito breeding site
Not if the water is constantly in motion. Mosquito 🦟 thrive only in stale and stagnant water!
Mosquitoes breed in stagnant water.
Do you think they care?
@@damilolaobidairo4821even it's in constant motion, if theres a water that they can breed they do it
@@ajguevarra12 no if the water is constantly in circulation it will kill all the mosquitoes as the eggs are delicate and fragile
This could potentially work if you enclosed the space around the tubes so that the water running over the tubes is not exposed to air and light. The interior volume would need to fill up with water which would also remove oxygen. Then the water is separate from the outside environment and doesn't contribute to humidity. And maybe use aluminum tubes which have excellent thermal conductivity (and are not porous).
It was already there in Fatehpir Sikri for a long time before Shahjahan. One can see the remains of the structure. The water used to be pour manually by servants and were placed where there was more windy.
Water cooler- Who am I...? Am I invisible to you or am I a joke to you?😮😮😮
It's exactly an inefficient Water cooler. In older times in Rajasthan they used desert grass, moist by water on windows, the same grass used in older desert coolers. That idea is actually more simple and effective.
Cooling of bee hives is through fanning of the wings of the bees. It has nothing to do with the hexagonal shape of the individual cells. That is merely an efficient use of space and provides greater strength to the structure. The individual cells are plugged with pupae, therefore no air passes through them. The cooling system here exhibits none of the mechanics of a bee hive other than a passing similarity. However it is still an effective way of cooling the air and has been practicing for a long time in the greenhouse farming industries among others. Nothing new here.
Bees flap wings to evaporate moisture from their honey and wax. That evaporation is what cools it. aka.Evaporative cooling. Which is exactly what happens here.
The hexagonal shape thing was probably something the narrator pulled out from their ignorance. I have watched an older long format video on them, they don't say anything about 'hexagonal shape', which is exactly why it's not in hexagonal shape. But their shape does have significance, as their inlet opening is larger than the outlet to create Burnauli's cooling mechanism
If I buy a ps5 I’m either gonna try this project or pay anything to make it look like that… damn this looks incredible
Only good in open outdoor areas. Mold and algae will appear inevitable and they pose serious health hazard especially in enclosed areas. They also need to make sure that all surfaces have no stagnant water to prevent mosquitoes breeding there.
Low electric consumption but high water consumption
It's recyclable water
@@Omer1996E.Cwich requiere electricity
Then it will consume electric to recycle water.
@@shironoyami7002 the question should be, "will it bring greater cost benefits?", because either way we are going to use some kind of cooling technology, so a sustainability and affordability should be the things to consider
@@Omer1996E.C yeah this looks very interesting in a glance, but can't be made functionally in smaller sizes, can't be used in every part of the world and can't be used for household.
Source: trust me bro
Teracota material is Great Conductor of HEAT 😂😂😂
It required electricity for the water circulation pump and the fan. Saves the compressor electricity through. So surely cutoff atleast 50% electricity for sure. And if the part of fountain water flow then save that electricity too.
Water is more precious than electricity.
You can re use the used water
@@mahantburman4059so you need to buy filter to reused it? Hahahahahaha
@@ajguevarra12 I hope you know about water pump...
Absolutely Right
Water is renewable, but electricity is produced from burning coal (majorly). The amount of electricity required to pump water every now and then vs that required for AC is what gives this idea a positive nod.
Nice concept, but it doesn't work well in humid environments with high dew point temperatures.
That's why they're doing it in the dessert lel
Humid condition were never for human living , just becos British developed your costal humid cities in last 100 years ... You fallen in trap of it ... Ot else only balance temp condition good for human living
@@macdeep8523😂 Enrich your shallow knowledge. The coastal areas in India are inhabited since thousands of years.
@@AtulSingh-fv4uq wrong , you are wrong ,only river basins inhabited by golden civilization , your enslaved civilization dieing in humid concentration camps
@@macdeep8523 I live in the Eastern US. Most of the area east of the Rocky Mountains is humid all summer.
I was searching for AC/DC songs and ended up watching this video.
But u need consider the shape of those tubes as its circumferential area low to high to low . Which intern high velocity to high pressure . That high pressure gas is cooled with water . Then it will go out from high pressure to hogh pressure which even forther reduces the temp . Thats simple yet effective .👍
1. Less electricity used only pump.
2. Cools the air in the room.
3. No need to close door.
4. Lots of water needed.
5. Increase humidity in room.
6. Damage electronic equipment if in water proof close box
The cost of electricity for pump is like for fan 😂😂😂😂
They do not work 😂
Probably won't be cheaper. Water is not a good coolant, and very heavy.
Yeah what about these flys that flys in your house constantly and mosquitoes
Now if this can be use to help to cool outdoor AC units. It can serve the cooling needs without increasing humidity, well at least not inside.
Damp be like : Meri selection go gai h 😂😂
Bhai ne to cooler hi bana diya 😂
Water pump is free of cost. Thanks a lot.
In Australia we call it "evaporative air conditioners"😂
Amazing this could be used to cool gardens and large open space during summers creating a cool ambiance for those who vist
You find this type of cold air near waterfalls. But there the water flow is constant and the water is flowing from inside the mountain.
Another solution- Similarly structure without water, terracotta pipes with large holes on outer side and small holes on inner side...As the air passes from large side to small side of pipe, the air gets cooled due to compression...Mesh on both sides of the pipes can avoid mosquito breeding... Solar connected motor can also be used if water is required... Energy and Water is abundant in nature...we don't have technology to get it...This is a very good project...I see most of the comments talking about problems...Good thing here is we know what are the problems...All we need to do is to find smart solutions...
Nice, can we work on the solution
There is no need to protect against mosquitoes. They can't brees in a thin layer of flowing water which doesn't pool
Physics - compression heats the air. You may want to reverse your physics.
@@striker44 Well, it looks like you did learn that physics much. The air here isn't just contained in a box as pressurized. It's moving.
And to know how moving air here is cooled down, look up something called bernaulli's principle 'faster air moves lower its pressure'. And these tubes have inlet larger than the out let, meaning the air particles moving through the smaller office will be faster, thus cooling the surrounding. Put your hand on air leaking from a tube tire puncture and see if that air is hot or cool
@aleenaprasannan2146 he said, "air gets cooled by compression". That is wrong. I did not talk about the flows. Now, go back to your physics book.
If we connect a solar powered generator to power the water flow then it would be perfect
Power an AC with solar, instead
You can put that inside your house if you're planning on building one.
1920's tech. Our church in Florida which was built in 1938 has the original cypress wood swamp cooler. It is 8x8x10 feet and cools a large church on hot Florida days.
When you stay in newly constructing house u feel tha same.......isse bhi ac kehthe😂😂😂
so it's same as radiator right?
kind of. But this concept already exist thousand years ago
It’s the same as a swamp cooler
Thus why there's lots of plants on tropical waterfall, almost have same concept.
@@salmonoven I almost thought your pfp is a dck
No radiator is very different. The radiator is a closed system where two fluids do not mix with each other. In this arrangement, however, there's mixing of two fluids.
But this is going to be a maintenance nightmare. Not to forget the humidity aspect.
On humid day- mumma meri Shaktiyaan kaam nhi kar rahi Hain😆
bhai, use convergent tubes, thats conic tubes, when air flowes from wider to narrorwer area it cools down by 5 to 8 degree, so your solution will become more effective.
Who's gonna pay the water bill and the electricity bill😅
Greta loose 🐈 energy
This built into the cooling tube of a earth ship would be amazing
Looks more like a hornet nest than a beehive...
then how the water circulated? if it did not use electricity?
hillside stream?
preferably a stream off a tall cool mountain
@@k0nanick so it is useless unless it was installed near high mountain with cool freash and clean water stream on top of it, then why do i need cooling air if i was live in that kind of place?
@@mnhusin509 don't knock it with me go and live there
@@k0nanick hmmmm
Those people complaining or criticizing the idea and the possible problems. You already created the problem without even trying it, instead of complaining, why not give your suggestions? What can we do to make it better? You know, let's all be positive. And i see this invention as eco-friendly/ less damaging
the point is that it's being almost romanticized, when it's clearly not that great. also, criticizing things is part of making something better
People love being crabs.
Is not eco friendly.
Wasting water and power.
Is a cool idea. But dont say is ecofriendly
Is it really something new? Is it really eco-friendly? Is it really effective? The same effect can be got if we just wet a cloth and hang it on our windows. Making terracota means burning things (hence pollution) to harden the clay. Also, the continuous flow of water means electricity and water wastage. Also, this won't work in humid areas. So, we can see through the entire idea being just an old wine in a new expensive bottle with a good marketing.
Imagine humidity 💀
Where the water comes from without electricity 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
pump and ac Same electricity nahi leti Bhondu
That's crazy. Love from Pakistan ❤
A natural air cooling system could be created using terracotta pots and waterfalls. The pots' porosity allows for evaporative cooling, lowering the temperature of air passing over the water. A small turbine could harness the energy of the falling water to generate electricity, powering a water pump and purification system. This closed-loop design would recycle the water, ensuring continuous operation and water conservation. Solar panels could supplement the system's power, resulting in an environmentally-friendly and potentially self-sustaining cooling solution.
That water flowing must be magic, and that cost $1200 a day to hire the magician
What about humidity 😅
The comments highlight people's love of the problem, rather than praising a solution, I personally love it, and would love to install one.
No these comments highlight that not every cool idea constitutes a solution.
I got news for you we've been using grass swamp coolers for long long time but that kind of cooling only works in low humidity if it gets real high humidity end up with mold in your walls and in your house
Me: **heard the word architect**
Also me: "Say less"
هذا الاختراع يلزمه شيئان الاول مصدر ماء مستمر والثاني اما منزل يدور حول محوره حتى يوجهه باتجاه الريح او الخيار الثاني ان يكون مصدر الهواء يأتي من اتجاه واحد لا يتغير
This is to avoid harmfull gases which comes from AC , yes this also needs electricity but this does not produce the harmfull gases like chlorChlorofluorocarbons (CFCs)
Water wastage
@@tripperveer that much water is not required just the terracotta should be moist
It simulates raining outside, just hose your house when its hot the result will be the same and cheaper too
The problem is the regions with high relative humidity, since evaporation will be very minimum and that is why cooolers doesn’t work in these regions.. Example Kolkata and far east..humid and hot at the same time
Basically a large desert cooler. Khas is replaced by tubes
This might work in a dry climate but not in the hot monsoon season.
That ain't even hexagonal like a bee hive
Used in Bangalore, get ready to get a penalty of 60k !!!
The water pump need more electricity than cooling fan😂
These guys are amazing!❤ everyone from around the world should learn from them!!!😘😘😘 deff can help with the climate too.. if that is not mainly obvious!
❤️❤️❤️🔥🌟🙏🏻🌟🔥❤️❤️❤️
The windows in Hawa Mahal in Jaipur are build on the same concept....blows the coolest air even in prickly summers.., hence the name ...Hawa Mahal😊
During pitching inventor said we dont use electricity for pumping the water, we use bucket to lift and pour it burn fats and makes you healthier.😂
You say that it's inspired from a beehive but then create terracotta that is circular instead of hexagonal
I had made a similar model 10 years ago using copper pipes.
This is awesome, but still the cheapest and most efficient air conditioning is shade. Also any underground constructions would be cost-effective
Cooler sitting in the corner and then left the chat. 😂
Just a little problem:
If you live in a place where is hot and humid at same time, this won't work at all
This is essentially a swamp cooler. Which doesnt work in humid weather.
Meanwhile water pump Is running without electricity 😊
Have you ever seen the back part of a cooler??😂😂😂
It's not air conditioner It's a swamp cooler It's works differently from normal AC and swamp cooled are only effective in some of weather area (less effective in hot humid area)
Also, it's cooling ability will probably significantly decrease in humid conditions. It's more like a cooler and not an AC.
This design will add enormous amounts of humidity to the areas it cools. Algae will begin to grow almost immediately. Bad invention.
Meanwhile humidity left the chat
Humidity of the cooled air passing through these terracotta tubes is increased. It doesn't help if the relative humidity levels in the room is high, and may encourage fungal infestation under the right conditions.
*Don't call AC, it's moreover a Desert cooler* 😅
This is old school air-conditioner. I used to see similar device that uses water such as this when I was a small kid.
Trypophobics :💀💀💀
Is this still working with that much water flow or has it been abandoned by the factory owner?
Fan evaporation cooling system in a polyhouse is pretty much working on same principle
"It was inspired by hexagonal shape of beehive..."
Shows round tubes😂
If you ever feel you are 'worthless' then watch this 😂
We use Bori (Paper bag😅) to keep water cool by wrapping it around and then soaking it in village when I go.
Evaporative cooling is not a new invention. It has been there since ages. I have seen vervain (called "Wala") curtains on the side on a fan boxed with water container at the top and water seeping on those vervain curtains. Those did wonderful job.