Car Camp on Warm Nights With This Invention (V2)
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 พ.ย. 2023
- Reflectix is a great starter window cover for car camping. But it does not allow for any circulation. With these window covers paired with the sunroof fan you’ll have no condensation and be cool while car camping on warm nights.
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Window Unit Material:
Plastic Panel: amzn.to/3QvHcY2
Pockets: amzn.to/46kBFKC
Fan: amzn.to/3gbuM9Q
Battery: amzn.to/3SOEz7g
Nylon Bolts: amzn.to/47DWly3
Rain Guards: amzn.to/3VEUX9k
Black Caulk: amzn.to/3EWvHFM
3M Tape: amzn.to/3MRszOi
Sunroof Unit Materials:
Plastic Panel: amzn.to/3QvHcY2
Pockets: amzn.to/46kBFKC
Fan: amzn.to/46lf0NZ
5 to 12 V Cable: amzn.to/46oDVQV
Fan Control Switch: amzn.to/46ogVRU
Battery: amzn.to/3sHvWAB
Fan Guards: amzn.to/47FiWug
Nylon Bolts: amzn.to/47DWly3
3M Tape: amzn.to/3MRszOi
Tools
Heat Gun: amzn.to/3goQJST
Utility Knife: amzn.to/3yYEeE7
Dewalt Drill: amzn.to/3UXoGct
3.5” Hole Saw: amzn.to/3QJCPcO
4.5” Hole Saw: amzn.to/3QOitii
Solder Iron: amzn.to/3QHeAfj
** This is Matt's legal department here to tell you those are affiliate links. He will make a couple pennies if you use those links to buy those things. - ภาพยนตร์และแอนิเมชัน
Your exhaust fans can only expell as much air as your intake fans let into the vehicle - if they'd push out more air, they'd create a vaccuum. For maximum efficiency (noise as well as power consumption), intake and exhaust volumes should be evenly matched. To further reduce noise and increase power efficiency, consider how much airflow you really need. The vehicle's interior volume is not that big. Let's say the volume is 4 cubic meters (which is almost certainly an over-estimatation), to refresh all the air in the vehicle once every minute, you'd only need a capacity of 240 m3/h or about 140CFM.
From not enough to too much. Haha. Please hold for another year while I perfect. Thanks for the info!
I am confusion from this comment
@@nickhernandez4264 Ok. There's 2 parts to this:
1.) Fan capacity - You have a certain amount of air in the car, and you want to refresh this air. The intake fans pump fresh air into the car. The exhaust fans pump stale air out of the car. These have to be balanced. You can not pump in more than you take out. And you can not take out more than you let in. Making the exhaust fans much bigger than the intake fans , just means they are inefficient. They try to work really hard, but they can not pump so much. This will use more electrical power and create more noise.
2.) Airflow - to keep the inside air nice and healthy, you want to refresh it periodically. That means letting stale air out, and letting fresh air in. If you refresh it too slow, the air will go stale, and you will get problems with humidity inside the car. If you cycle the air too quickly, you're wasting electrical power on your fans by making them work more than they need to. If it is cold outside, you will also have a harder time keeping the air inside nice and warm if you constantly bring in cold outside air. In short: you will need to find a balance, where you refresh only as much air as is needed, using as little electrical power for the fans as possible.
Hope this helps :)
@@akumabito2008 very helpful, greatly appreciated ( you're to kind most people wouldn't have tooken the time to write out and explain ). Learn something new every day gotta love it 👍
@@nickhernandez4264 you're welcome, my dude. Have an awesome day!
I made a similar setup for my sunroof but with only one giant 5V noctua fan plugged directly into a battery bank. For the rear windows, I used blackouts made of reflectix with black cloth and some gutter guards glued on the top. With window rainguards, it was pretty much invisible from the outside and kept us comfortable during warm nights. We also had fans inside the car to help with really warm nights.
You are a freaking genius Matt. Most under-rated channel on TH-cam.
🙏🏽
I totally agree ! Both the product and the video are crazy quality
As a 3D Printer myself, and as a recent Honda Element owner with big plans for travel next seasons, I can totally appreciate the amount of work that goes into making such things for my own vehicle. Thanks for sharing! I'll be sure to be doing something like this setup!
Would love to see it when it's done!
Thanks for another awesome video Matt. As a homeless veteran living in my vehicle your designs have inspired me.
I do know CFMs from working in HVAC so your airflow looks plentiful for the size of the cabin in your vehicle. 400CFM would be considered 1Ton of heating/cooling capacity. Imagine pushing 400 basketballs a minute of air through your car that mix to help bring the temperature average down.
Glad I could help Kev! Thanks for the info.
@@portcityengineering that too!
I made a setup for my camper shell that pulls in air from the front pass through window and vents it out the side windows. Absolute game changer!
My car has a similar system. It has a hidden blower fan installed in the dash. It pulls air from a weather protected vent, has vents throughout the vehicle that can be directed where needed, and is powered by a huge battery under the hood. My car actually came with it from the factory! I think yours might have this system too 😂
Just kidding, this is super awesome and I loved seeing your creative process. The reason I said that above was I stumbled on a video of a guy that was building out a van and didn’t want to cut a hole in his roof, and he utilized the factory blower fan. He tapped into the blower fan circuit and controlled and powered it with his battery bank, independently of the factory wiring. It still worked like normal, but when the car was off he could flip his switch in the back and it turned on his fan. Pretty smart, on a budget especially!
Haha. Yes turning on the AC is an option.
I think I’ve seen the video you’re talking about. I’m still a little scared to make changes to the vehicle itself but I might look more into this.
Yeah I get it, especially on a new Honda which has a BCM (body control module), or more likely an entire module that just controls the HVAC. His van was an older econoline which has a very basic system
most cars have a build in vent in the rear! it lets pressure escape so that when you open a window on the highway it doesnt blow your sunroof to the moon, its quite possible by keeping a positive pressure in the cabin area these vents would react by letting out the extra pressure! great build! feel i learned plenty for my own challenges! thanks
uh, might want to swap your window fans with your vent fans. You want to be pulling positive pressure inside your car, not negative pressure. helps to keep dust and stuff out
This is just way too cool! Now I just need to grab my Sawzall and cut a sunroof in the roof of my 4runner! Greg
Haha. It might be worth it!
Matt, yeah could be. I bought the low end model..... lol Greg
Use one back window for intake and one for exhaust. Duh
Re: the spicy youtube comments at the beginning. They're mistaking their own experience for yours. Personally, I love what you're doing, and at least 3.1k others agree
I always look forward to your videos; yet another great design! Thanks for sharing the design and documenting the process. 👍
Matt, I love your videos! I, too, love to over-engineer every aspect of my build, but you're next-level. Please keep them coming. Would love to see more of what you've done!
Nothings quite as fun as over-engineering! That might need to go on a T-Shirt.
CFM: Cubic Feet per Min. Volume of air in feet, could be and liner measurement eg CC, Yards, cubits as long as you get it cubed. I would put some Gaffer tape on the tiny bolts against the window so it doesn't scratch it or rip-up the tint. Excellent as usual, I love your sarcastic? humor, it's motivating. I look forward to each one, well the ones I like, Lol. Safe Travels buddy!
You don’t like them all???!? Haha. Thanks for watching Mitch!
Great job on the video Matt! Thanks for making it.
Genius system. Please
Keep making more videos!!
This channel rocks! Thanks man!
Really enjoy your videos. While this setup is overkill for my needs, i can easily downsize the fans, etc. like you mentioned. Thank you for sharing. The peeping window is a good idea. Cheers.
First video of your's that has been recommended to me. Instant subscribe, thanks for posting.
Exactly what I was after - thanks so much for such a comprehensive video.
I found your channel today from your old ventilation video and today I also found out you made this cool update to the system just uploaded like 2 days ago, please post more. 🎉🎉🎉
In such a small space as a vehicle I would either push or pull the air but not both, which ever way I would think a hood system to block rain with insect screen would be less complicated and less expensive. One important thing to know about airflow is you can't exhaust more than you can pull in and vice versa
Most of your airflow is actually getting blocked by your window coverings. Your window fan units are rated at 35 CFM each and not sure if they are even delivering that much due to the gap size. So in essence you have 70 cfm entering and 300 cfm trying to suck but you're not getting that 300, at most you're getting around 70 cfm +/-. Also you can't add the intake and exhaust together for an entire system and rate it at 370 cfm since it can't deliver that.
If you remove air faster than replacing then you will have a negative pressure in the cabin and if you're putting more air in than removing then you will end up with positive pressure in the space. Typically when cooling, you will have a better experience with a negative pressure system think about attic fans in a house. If you adjust your window coverings to have a gap for fresh air and remove the fan altogether it will keep your car cooler than with the system you have now due to restrictions of those window fans and the size of gap you currently have.
Finally to get the air to be replaced and not take a short cut from the window to the sunroof, you can always use a drop cloth or something similar between against the roof and drop down behind the front seats until about 6 inches from the floor. This would require the air to circulate down first then around the curtain and back up. Then you could use your window fans now to cycle air from front to back behind the front seats.
Paint the car white, It drastically reduces internal temperature of car
This content is brilliant. Cheers Matt
I love 'crafting' things. I love road trips. I'll be using some of your ideas. Thanks for making your videos fun to watch.
I really like your ideas. They actually inspired me to try the moon roof one on my camping Range Rover. I actually used a small usb outlet solar panel and leave the roof cracked so it kept the vehicle well vented in the hot days when parked. And reconnect the fan to a power bank in the nights when camping. Great job and glad you are keeping it evolving :)
I like to think of a CFM as a beach ball of air. It's one Cubic Feet of air per Minute.
Thanks for all of these genius window treatments. I'm converting a 2003 Honda Odyssey and ventilation is a serious problem. It only has the driver/passenger windows and two small vents in the rear windows. And that's it. I'm seriously considering cutting a hole in the roof to put an RV fan in. The part that scares me is trying to remove the headliner. Fortunately I plan to drive it till it dies or sell it as a camper so I'm not concerned about punching a few holes in it. Subscribed!
This is good, now can you find a way to filter the incoming air? This is a must for urban camping in places that might be polluted, or places where once is temporarily forced to camp.
Love your modifications 👍
Love the book as well as the amazing video.
Wow! Just the techie I needed to learn from. Just subscribed. 😃
Excellent, thanks for sharing!
Thank so much.
so freaking pumped everytime you make a video, I just litterally mounted something to my strut roof rack thanks to you!
How’s she holding up? Mine’s still holding strong.
Solid as the day I put it on, I havent even painted it yet and only have surface rust on the cut ends after being in the weather for months. Your design is a lot smoother for air flow and I want to build it one day, but until then I found one of those work fans people use on construction sites that use power tool batteries it has a hook that folds out on the bottom, and the crossbar hangs over the sunroof and I just hang it from the crossbeam, one charge runs all night into the morning.@@MattTheDesigner
Thank you 💯
Gonna need way more videos you do a great job
OMG Instantly SUBBED!!!! You’re great Matt!!! ❤
Thank you zebra!
Only upgrade I'd recommend, ability to make either side window fan exhaust. Easiest (but more costly, probably) add a second fan to the window units blowing out. In my brain this should still give you air circulation in less than great weather. As long as the intake and exhaust are spaced apart, you shouldn't get any short cycling. Keep a more powerful fan for exhaust to force the air out further. For my application (but I'll probably never build) I don't have a sunroof. I do have two rear windows that pop out with a manual clip. Definitely got my creative juices flowing. Love your videos.
These ABS sheets and little fans could be configured in all kinds of ways. You should build one!
This guy made one for his minivan's pop-out windows, attaching it to a window cover made with chloroplast. Allows for good air flow/circulation. Not as 'stealthy' as Matt's, but still a good option.
th-cam.com/video/iooH2nQpKR0/w-d-xo.html
pretty darn awesome
Thank you sir, that gives me an idea
This is really very useful
Great video!
Dude. You are such an inspiration. Thank you for your creations!
My pleasure!
I may very well need to reference this again
Thanks so much for your videos! I've learned so much and you make it seem so easy! I just went through 2 cancer treatments in 6 months and I'm ready to start planning (and building) for a life filled with adventure!
Living life to the fullest! This is so cool to hear. Enjoy your travels my friend!
Great stuff! Subscribed!
Try it out with just the exhaust fans. Buy the rain guards for all the windows and just leave them open an inch or two.
Yeah, if you have forced exhaust then you're going to get fresh air coming in regardless. Really cool work with all the 3D printing though!
You are amazing my dude!!!
I have a 2022 CRV Hybrid I use for weekend/travel overnighting occasionally! I absolutely love all your creative hacks! New sub, tyvm for sharing-Lisa👍
The side window units are the neatest to see built, but they're a bit redundant now that there's a beefy sunroof unit. If it weren't for such a nice 'snorked' breeze position, I'd think they'd mostly just get in the way vs removing them.
Glue magnets inside of a sunroof wind deflector to make the sunroof more rain-proof. You can lay bug screen down and the magnetized sunroof deflector will hold down half while magnets can hold the rest.
Yes I will buy
Happy to stumble across your channel. I’ve got these phantek fans kicking around might have to give it a whirl
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Fun! Cool to see your creativity and ingenuity. What you can accomplish with the right tools is quite impressive.
So true!
amazing!!!
This is a game changer for car camping!!!
Or simply get an electric car, some have camp mode, so the heater/AC runs, perfect inside, even in winter, run radio/streaming. No 12V battery worry like on ice cars.
with my set up of an bug out vehicle, due to hurricanes and the like, i find this an excellent idea. i would love to see a video of it working real time out in the field. because we all know it is how it really functions.
I might try to devise some real tests to measure temps and airflow. Not sure exactly how yet though.
@@MattTheDesigner overnight solo camp, with temp gauge on start and how they function during the night. if there is a noticeable drop in temp or how the air is moving thru the space
If you use a usbc pd Bank, you can get 12v out. You can over volt fans slightly. 12v is optional on the pd specification, and I've noticed anker isn't the biggest fan of 12v on a lot of their products
If you car camp in a Prius 2014 and before that time, with the nickel battery, just hit ac button and set temperature, and you have a really comfortable night. I did it for 3 months in really cold and then hot temps. After 2014 they installed lithium batteries which have trouble starting in the cold temps. Just an idea. Although with your idea, you could do that in any car!
I’d like to figure out how to do real AC all night. Maybe my next next video.
To minimize noise on the top fans you shiuld add a small spacer between the fan filter and the fans themselves. Noctua makes one specifically for their fans and are known to be the best PC fans out there if you don't care about RGB
Underated channel very transparent love your videos +1sub
Thanks @fanda9994 !
Would probably be easier to utilize the car's factory HVAC fans and just wire them to run off a 2nd power source and the window vent can be the exhaust.
Air exchange, great! Now if air could be taken from under the car to the inside, it would be much cooler. The other is to design a swamp cooler for cars, this design is almost there, just need a damp cloth to draw air through, and a drip system to keep the cloth damp.
I really appreciate that you read the user feedback and then took the time to update and remake this tutorial. The mark of a true designer! (And also you give your plans out for free?? Thank you so much!!)
I'm converting my Cube into a little camper van for scuba trips around the southeast and I was worried about the moisture problem inside the car. (Moist environment + Moist diving gear = A very bad and moist time.) My university has 3D printers for student use, so I'm going to try this out and see how it goes! Thanks again!
I don't have a sun roof, so I think I'm going to try having an intake fan on one side of my car, and an exhaust fan on the opposite side for air flow. (I guess just flip the fan facing the other way so it blows out??? I'll figure it out!)
I'm brand new to this so if anyone has any input, feedback, or suggestions, I'd love to hear it. Right now I'm a little worried about moisture accumulating on the window of the exhaust side and I'm not sure what the solution for that is.
You could try the one fan in one window and crack the opposite for a more passive exhaust. Then figure out an exhaust fan if that’s not enough.
Or maybe a fan pulling air into the front and back window on the left side and windows cracked on the right.
On the topic of wanting to dispell heat from the switch, I'd put some bumpers between it and the ABS
First video i saw and damn thats so cool. I dont need to camp in my car but ideas ideas ideas
None of those fans move rated CFM with the amount of restrictions you're putting in place. Still a neat idea I havent seen before.
Just bought all of the parts. Look forward to seeing how this works in the Virginia Heat 😬
They’ll be headed your way soon!
I need that lil fogger/smoke machine.
It's really cool. Got it from Vosentech
Cool!
Bro top notch jimmy rigging!
I'm subscribing just for the "Hitchhiker's Guide" shot...
The problem with your batteries is likely because the fans are not drawing enough current and it is auto shutting down.
Also you need flux to help with your soldering skills. Do not using plumbing flux on electronics. I recommend Kester 2331-ZX but this requires washing after because its conductive and slightly corrosive...but Kester 182 is another good rosin based option.
with the 12volt fans i would have used USBc PD and the highest wattage availible with a little voltage selection board
That is great idea. I have power bank with USBC-PD ability. No need to buy another 5V fan (not powerful enough, so you need three fans, of course also need to consider the Fan noise). I have plenty of computer fan that I gathered from years of used old computers. All I need is to add a speed adjuster.
😀😀😀😀
can't wait til you update to the san Ace or Delta 12V fans that are 200+ CFM. It's only a low dB level of 50+
wesome invention and video! Crazy good editing!!
Mysetup is pretty jank, but i could make it better if lil suction cups stick to avs plastic.🤔
Neat.
you need to make a hood in the upper part on the same window, and you need to open the roof
Awesome video! I recently made the V1 collapsible platform for my CRV and love it. Thanks so much for the plans. I do have a question for you. Will the battery pack you use for your window (26800 PD) run your sunroof? I know you said your sunroof battery will not run your window. I already own the 26800 PD and I’m hoping to use it for the sunroof, if it works. Thanks!
Yes it should run the sunroof.
I love this video! Thanks for the great design ideas. Just one thing that I would like to comment on.
Your current design appears to produce negative air pressure. That is, the air pressure inside the vehicle might be lower than the outside air pressure. The potential problem with that is dust and pollen could end up gathering inside eventually, especially during pollen season.
I don't know if you consider this an issue or not, but positive air pressure would be ideal.
Always room for improvement. It’s still new so more testing needs to be done for sure.
sounds like someone has experience in either spray painting booths or dust free labs...
*I'm totally going to build this for my truck. Hopefully the rear center window has enough CFM.*
C F MMMM. How did you make that comment bold. 🤔
This would just fail in southern hot states. At night the heat indexes are still in the high 90’s with the heat and nasty humidity. You’d need a full sized box fan just to breath as you sleep in your sweat drenched clothes
Hint: when you solder use Blu Tack to hold parts in place.
Your battery has an overcurrent protection and shuts off to protect the battery from catching fire.
@5:08 HAHAH Perfect. But seriously, pay this man
💰
ABS or PETG+ on the 3D printer. way better for dealing with high temps in a vehicle
11:28 That Marcus guy has some good insights huh?
He does. Unfortunately he doesn't know a thing about car camping.
All though the system was very well made, I can tell your not a big car guy.
Most vehicles built since 2000 had an abs vent built in the rear of the vehicle, for cars and SUVs it’s usually placed in the side of the cabin area with the vent hidden behind the rear bumper valance. For trucks it’s usual on the rear wall of the cab below the trucks bed line. These vents are large enough to pull and push air with your large fans. There is normally a vent on both side of the vehicle so it’s just a matter of run one pulling and one pushing to circulate the air.
The idea is to prevent the cabin area from becoming a giant air brake if your driving down the road at like 65mph with a window down.
Maybe I’m an idiot savant.
So that anker battery pack turns off because of the low power going through it. It turns off to save it's battery. I think if you long hold the button it turns that feature off. Either that or like double tap it. Once of the little LEDs should change color.
OMG I feel stupid ahha. Sorry Anker for the false claims.
I just really like the sunroof design and function to having to get those huge rooftop fan systems…. Thou I’d probably leave my sunroof open during the night and storms roll in, what if the sunroof fans was intake comepared to exhaust?
It’s easy to just turn them in. You really feel the airflow when you do that.
Coooool…. Now if you were closer so i could help make stuff. I like the roof idea. Could fit most makes n models if it was adjustable or with attachments for each size. Most sunroofs are similar sizes right?
I would think so. There are some fancy SUVs with giant ones but those people probably are staying in hotels.
Do you really need to add fans to the side windows if you already have the 300cfm fans in the sunroof? You’d probably just need vents? Assuming a closed cabin, the air being pushed out of the sunroof would cause a decrease in air pressure which would then suck in air from the side windows so the side window fans may not be needed if you want to simplify things in the future.
It’s probably overkill. The hope was that folks would take bits and pieces of this and do what works for them. Thanks for watching Clifford.
Ok. 👍🏻 Cool project overall. Thanks for taking the time to make the video. 👏🏻
I love it. could you provide name of the fans, cables, switch and battery?
The links should be in the description.
Amazing Thinking.
I want to ask you about the small and handy device which is producing smoke.
where can I get it?
vosentech.com/
Looks like you could modify an old cell phone case for that 3D part that redirects the air.
Then what would I do with all my time?
You should try printing with PETG. It is much more heat resistant than PLA.
I actually bought a roll of it but saw you need some kind of housing and need to dial in settings. I decided to get this project out the door before I started fiddling with that. But now that it is…
If your car leaves the AC outside vent open when turned off you should be able to get all the air in you want. However it might be warm from the engine... just a thought. Easy test anyway.
Simply get an EV, some offer camp mode. AC/heater runs for days, plus radio/streaming/TV on the cars display. Sleep in the car in summer/winter without any issues
Hey @Matt The Designer can you link me to that little smoke machine please? 🙏🏼 🍻
vosentech.com