Fool wrote: ↑Thu May 16, 2024 6:23 pm
Here is a real DIY refrigerator. It has an explanation for temperature drop verses orifice. Ten feet of 1 mm tube for a larger pump.
Those little butane ones need a much much smaller hole or longer capillary, and even then unlikely to get claimed temperature drop at all.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=7QZrHzd3RA8
IMHO that person isn't much better than a hack, but miles better than those butane fakes.
Apples to oranges.
That guys using propane. Boiling point -43.6°F
The other guy is using isobutane. Boiling point 10.9°F
Butane is not practical for a household refrigeration system as it would quit working in a cold garage for one thing. Ever try using a cigarette lighter when it's cold?
Lower boiling point, higher pressure
Butane system operates at extremely low pressure, actually at a partial vacuum through 1/2 the system.
The orifice size is determined by the system pressure. A low pressure system does not need as restricting an orifice as a high pressure system. It has less pressure to hold back
Again you have no idea what you're talking about (
highlighted above)
Those tiny low pressure butane systems would likely require no more restrictive a metering device than what was provided.
But this is not an HVAC forum, so why don't you go watch a few more videos and stop trying to pass yourself off as an expert who knows more than the guy in the video, who IMO is quite obviously very skilled at building small air conditioning systems. And I'm obviously not referring to your looser fake fake debunking videos, many of whom can't get it to work because they obviously don't know what they are doing.