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stumpfield
Gold Member
MarkV said:Here is an idea I read about years ago and thought would be fairly easy and relatively inexpensive. The idea was to dig a large trench about 6’ down where the ground temps stayed constant year round in the upper sixties. Then they installed metal culvert pipe, don’t recall the size, in a “U” shape beginning and terminating at the foundation wall. After backfilling and building the home a blower was installed on one side of the pipe to force house air through the pipe. The theory was to take the hot/cold house air and condition it in the pipe to closer that of the ground temps by moving it through the culvert pipe. I would think that the longer the culverts loop the more it would condition the air being moved through it.
We had good results at a weekend home by building a cupola in the center over the area our woodstove sets. The cupola is about 6’ by 8’ and has six awning windows that are operated by electric motors from a wall switch. In the winter it lets us vent off excess heat from the woodstove and in the summer acts like a chimney to draw heat out of the house when the windows are open on the lower floors.
MarkV
A friend's dad in the area built his home with the culvert pipe idea. He ran about 200' of 18" culvert pipe underground away from the house but it never really worked. To be effective, he would need somewhere around 2000+'. There's not enough time to cool the air in such a short run.
The cupola in the center is what I plan to incorporate into my plan. Except I call it an observation tower instead. It will be a 12'x12' room with a spiral staircase in the center and windows on all side. During the summer time, heat will rise to this area and vent out naturally. It will also take advantage of the summer breeze. I can accelerate air flow by open/close different windows to cause a siphon effect to suck hot and stale air out of the house without the use of fans. What I need is a source of cooler air for the intake side. I'm thinking of running a copper pipe down to the well and loop back up to act as a condenser. Since it's submerge under water a few hundred feet underground, it should cool the air through the pipe pretty quickly.
I guess I'm trying to make the house itself as a slow pace air conditioner.