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Amazing Products TV How to Build a DIY Portable Air Conditioner

Awesome Tips How to Build a DIY Portable Air Conditioner



Cool down with this DIY portable AC made out of parts you might have sitting around the house. Here’s how to do it.

Read the CNET Article for more info:
How to Make Your Own Portable AC Unit at Home This Summer

0:00 Intro
0:06 What you’ll need
0:32 Drilling the holes
1:08 Inserting the Liner and the PVC Pipes
1:35 Cutting a hole in the lid
2:20 Adding Ice
2:30 Final Result

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Comments

  1. *swamp cooler

  2. Uh wouldn't the easiest solution be to just set up a fan to blow air over the ice in a bowl or something? This is overcomplicated AF

  3. Your fridge will produce more heat inside when you freeze the water that this bowl might cool

  4. Try using refrigerant next time.

  5. Clickbait jerk – this is not Air Conditioner, this is Air COOLER!

  6. Get a window A/C, even an old, used one. It would be many times more effective and it would cost less to operate. And please don't call this "contraption" an air conditioner.

  7. I would rather just put that ice in a cup of water. Thanks though 👍

  8. So how many hours does it last before having to put more ice?

  9. Having just made my own DIY cooler / AC, I can tell you this won't do much. You might get a trickle of cool air out of the three tubes for maybe an hour or two before your ice turns into a bucket of warm water. I did something similar using a 50 qt cooler, except I added a small pump and ran the ice water through a transmission cooler (radiator). I set a fan behind the radiator to blow air through it. I load it up with 20-30 pounds of ice and it'll last 3-4 hours tops (it's more like 2.5 hours of cold air plus 1-1.5 hours of cool air).

    If you want the math…melting one pound of ice takes 144 BTU's of energy. Once the ice is melted, it takes 1 BTU to increase the temperature of water by 1 degree (F). So if you've got 20 pounds of ice in that bucket you'll get 2,880 BTU's of cooling power from melting the ice, plus another 800 BTU's to warm the water up from 32F to 72F. About 3,700 BTU's of cooling power if you load that bucket up. It's certainly better than nothing, but it's not going to be anything close to a real AC.

    You get some nice cool / cold air blowing over you for an hour, maybe 3 if you use a really big cooler. It's been a nice stop gap for us since our upstairs HVAC went out. My DIY solution is enough to help my daughter fall asleep, and by the time my ice runs out the ambient temperature has come down. I'm not kidding myself though…I ordered a real portable AC to get us through the rest of this year. Next year the federal government will literally be dropping money out of helicopters for anyone wanting to upgrade their HVAC…so I'm waiting for that.

  10. Your air conditioner is a fan and ice. I think I invented that first. I've found that getting cotton shirts wet and hanging them up to dry in a room will chill the room considerably. Really works.

  11. I love how people call this air conditioning. This relies on water's heat capacity and evaporation to cool. Adding ice just gives you cool air until it melts. If you live in a very humid area your ice will melt much faster because the circulating water is pulling heat from the air and the water (humidity) in the air out. Humidity is just water which has the same heat capacity as all water melting the ice which is frozen water. You will have condensation build up reducing the available surface area of the circulating water to cool air, etc. If you live in a dry climate go for it. Living in a humid climate you will waste more energy trying to keep ice in there than if you just bought a small a/c and plugged it in.

  12. Cnet is cool

  13. How to heat and cook the outdoors while burning up the planet as a bonus!

  14. Why not use a Styrofoam cooler instead of the bucket? That way it is already insulated and the ice would probably last longer even though you are blowing the fan on it.

    • M b
    • August 11, 2023

    Nonsense! This will make your already humid room much, much more humid!

  15. Amazon $40. Done.

  16. Thanks for sharing the tip

  17. In another 10 years that will be the only way to get AC in California

  18. its Good advice

    • Dan
    • August 11, 2023

    we need diy fridge to get ice first

  19. This is essentially a swamp cooler 😅

  20. JUST USE A FOAM COOLER

  21. Actually use similar in my grow tent. Works really well bringing temps down 3-5 degrees. When it’s hot, a little makes a big difference. Condensation cooled air in a bucket. You complain, I’m chilled.

  22. Great way to introduce mold into your home in some climates!

  23. The term for this is “swamp cooler” yeah? It’s an older concept.

    If you google “DIY swamp cooler” it’s full of this.

  24. Every Summer we see videos like this, 🙂 Does it really work?

  25. Just used the rechargeable desk fan, dorky D.I.Y! If it ain't cool enough wrap the ices in a piece of cloth and put it on your face!.. 🤣

  26. Deme dos!

  27. Air conditioners don't use water.. you've made a swamp cooler..

  28. GREAT JOB

  29. or buy a second hand box air con for $50 and put it in your window. thank you for the video though it was fun.

    • RED
    • August 11, 2023

    You'll need to get the ice from someone else's house for this to work indoors

  30. You reckon this could work?

  31. Yo, this vid on how to make a DIY portable AC was straight FIRE! Thanks, CNET! #fantaclaus

  32. For the 6 people who actually do this…I hope you enjoy it 🤷

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