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Thread: Water Coolers

  1. #1
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    Water Coolers



    Hallo to everybody !

    Please, I would be grateful if somebody could help me, since I didn't find a useful post about this issue:
    Premise:
    For condensers, you can specify the capacity in a certain condition.
    The capacity in a different condition can be, as a rule of thumb, be calculated with the variation of temperature between air and condensing temperature.
    This is the so called "heat rejection", that is expressed in kW/K.

    Please, it there a similar rule that can be applied for water coolers ?

    If not, do you know or do you utilize if there any rule to calculate the capacity of chillers in a condition different than a specified one ?

    Thanks in advance !



  2. #2
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    Brian_UK is offline Moderator I am starting to push the Mods: of RE Site Moderator : and general nice guy
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    Re: Water Coolers

    I would think that a water cooler would operate in a reasonably stable environment.
    Brian - Newton Abbot, Devon, UK
    Retired March 2015

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    Re: Water Coolers

    Hallo Mr. Brian,

    I am sorry, but I don't understand completely your question.
    My question is theoretical, of course I suppose the water cooler is operating in a stable condition.

    Maybe, apologizes for this, I am not been clear enough.
    What I mean is:
    I have a water cooler (the heat sink is the air).
    I have got the capacity in a certain condition.
    Is it possible to determine roughly the capacity in a condition different than the starting one starting form the given capacity ?

    Thanks and good night !!

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    Re: Water Coolers

    Quote Originally Posted by MrReds View Post
    Hallo Mr. Brian,

    I have a water cooler (the heat sink is the air).
    I have got the capacity in a certain condition.
    Is it possible to determine roughly the capacity in a condition different than the starting one starting form the given capacity ?

    Thanks and good night !!
    Roughly, maybe 6 to 10% loss for a 10 F increase in ambient, or 6 -10% gain for a 10 F decrease in the ambient temperature. The base design was probably around a 90 F ambient.

    These are SWAG numbers that should be close. If you need exact you should contact the manufacturer.

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