Homemade Pot-in-Pot Refrigerator "Off Grid Fridge" cools air up to 40F (evaporative cooler/chiller)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2024
  • pot-in-pot refrigerators (zeer pot coolers) will cool the air up to 40 degrees. no power needed. uses only 2 or 3 clay pots, sand, water and a towel. will cool the inner chamber up to 40 degrees (relative to the outside air). uses no electricity. will keep food fresh longer. note: i tested it when it was 120 degrees out. if you use it when the temperature is 80F-90F it will get down to 40F to 50F.

Komentáře • 256

  • @neilfoster814
    @neilfoster814 Před rokem +14

    My late father was in the British army in the 1950's stationed in the Middle East. They would wrap a water filled jerry can in a wet army blanket, keeping the blanket wet would cool the jerry can water down so much it would freeze! That's evaporative cooling for you!

    • @beavisroadhog9629
      @beavisroadhog9629 Před měsícem +2

      Uhhh,....I gotta call bullshit on the frozen can. Cold? Plausible. Frozen? Bullshit.

    • @jshaw4757
      @jshaw4757 Před měsícem +2

      ​​@@beavisroadhog9629If its windy enough it's possible that's the whole point off it is the wind hitting the water n evaporating it and cooling it (evaporation cooling) like sweating or some fridges n freezers so the windier the cooler it will get so use a couple PC fans or a fan or find a place that has some kind off exhaust or outlet off air and use that put your pot near that..for some reason with these pot videos nobody mentions the most important part the wind (and water)..call it the wind chill factor don't they and its often what sets people into hyperthermia much much faster than if wasn't windy especially if you and your clothes are wet because off evaporation cooling taking place the wind chill factor and if the army Jerry can was made off metal it would cool faster especially if was alluminium wrapped in a wet big blanket in a very windy spot easily could freeze maybe not solid but ice crystal form

    • @jshaw4757
      @jshaw4757 Před měsícem

      ​@@beavisroadhog9629Check out the ancient giant domed freezers in the deserts off Iran called yatchels 👍

    • @cathys949
      @cathys949 Před 18 dny

      Imagine how cool and refreshing that water would be to drink in such a hot climate! Aaahhh.

    • @deb7518
      @deb7518 Před 10 dny

      I think I'd want a Zeer Pot HOUSE, lol!

  • @sallywasagoodolgal
    @sallywasagoodolgal Před 10 lety +100

    My daughter's grandmother lived back in the hills (in the 1950's) with no utilities. She had a screen box outside her kitchen window (shaded by the porch roof). It was wood frame, covered with metal screen on the sides, and that covered with burlap. She'd wet the burlap down, and as it dried it would lower the temperature. It was her 'cooler', year around.

    • @The_New_Abnormal_World_Order
      @The_New_Abnormal_World_Order Před 4 lety +1

      ​@David Nothing wrong with asking questions but your comment sounded very rude that's all. It sounds to me like the original commenter was referring to their partner's Mother, but didn't want to mention their partner, for whatever reason.

    • @lesliekendall2206
      @lesliekendall2206 Před 4 lety +1

      My great Gpa and Gma made and had one of those.

    • @in_vas_por8810
      @in_vas_por8810 Před 4 lety +1

      @@Unknown-qi9zl Also, maybe not even his wife. Maybe a child out of wedlock otherwise he would have said "my mother in law". But yeah, I laughed at how confounded David was 😂😂😂

  • @TheGEODEAHOLIC
    @TheGEODEAHOLIC Před 11 lety +40

    stand the zeer pot on the little pots to get it in the air for more area exposed for more evap. put it in full shade & in slight breeze too for quicker evap. you will git better results.

  • @sigma2247
    @sigma2247 Před 8 lety +133

    I have a suggestion for you, place a foil sheet the shiney part facing outward over the wet towel this method should keep the contents inside the clay pot even cooler, try that. :-)

    • @fletcherpersinger5102
      @fletcherpersinger5102 Před 5 lety +21

      I think that would reflect the light. The evaporating process if in tandem with wind will actually make it cooler. Example just like how sweating cools your body. You can say we have a natural heating and cooling system in us.

    • @Yngsatchvai
      @Yngsatchvai Před 3 lety +6

      @@fletcherpersinger5102 for the longest time I thought perspiration was just to get you wet and that cools you, didn't know the act of evaporation was the kicker.
      I've tossed all my cotten summer shirts for the breathable fabrics. They make a HUGE difference

    • @MrRasZee
      @MrRasZee Před 3 lety +4

      wow the foil will cool and water will remain and not evaporate so much

    • @AndrewHelgeCox
      @AndrewHelgeCox Před 2 lety +3

      You'd want the inner chamber covered by a disk of foil at the most. The sand and sides of the outer pot need sunshine to drive the evaporative cooling. I wonder if a disk of insulation with foil facing out plugging the inner pot would be the best option, with no wet towels.

    • @janetlee191
      @janetlee191 Před 2 lety +9

      I don't think you should have it out in the sun. It should be in the shade or enclosed. Kind of counterproductive putting it in the sun

  • @hili467
    @hili467 Před 3 lety +28

    You have to use a closed pot so the evaporating water cant get inside. Also, skip the sand. Water holds ALOT of thermal energy. The way you’re using the sand is basically the same as putting your pot in a bucket of water and setting it in the sun. It wont be hotter than the bucket of water, but the bucket of water is going to heat up because its going to absorb energy faster than it can evaporate. Ever hang out in a shallow pool in summer? Water gets pretty warm, but when you get out and there is a breeze you suddenly feel much cooler than when you were in all that water. Only water on the surface can evaporate and that’s where the cooling happens - all the water that’s in the sand cant evaporate till it gets to the surface; it’s like a pool of warn water. You want to keep the water on the surface.
    Take two pots of the same size; wax the inside surface. Turn one upside down like a lid to make a closed chamber with the two pots. Put the towel over closed pot and pour water over the towel, repeat a few times as the towel starts to dry out.
    I think you’ll have much better results with this method.

    • @shedroids
      @shedroids Před rokem +12

      Make a video and share a link to teach us..

    • @Metqa
      @Metqa Před rokem +7

      the water is going to evaprate through the terracotta pot. it doesn't require sun to evaporate just heat. the terracotta pot is not watertight. the water will escape.
      Putting the pot in the sun is not required. all there needs is higher temperature and low enough humidity for the water to evaporate. Putting it into the sun will increase evaporation but also increase heat, counter to the goal of cooling.
      It iS a good idea to put a cover over the pot but it doesnt' have to be a water tight cover, in fact if the cover can hold and evaporate water, that is just another surface contributing to the heat transfer from the cooler.

    • @wmstroup6474
      @wmstroup6474 Před rokem +6

      The way he displays this is the way the ancient Egyptians used to keep foodstuffs cool, except the sand is supposed to be exposed to sunlight so the water can evaporate - this is what cools the inner container... evaporation. Covering the whole thing with a towel keeps water from evaporating from the sand. Only the innermost vessel should be covered. You will need to check the water level 3x per day due to evaporation, or the thermal mass from the sand will heat up and start keeping the inner vessel warmer than the outside.
      I don't know about skipping the sand part though - this method came from ancient river lands so if water was more efficient I suspect they would have just chosen to keep their cooler in the river rather than sand-filled amphorae.

    • @hili467
      @hili467 Před rokem +3

      @@wmstroup6474 look up videos of indian workers taking clay vessels into the fields to cool their food while they work. the vessels have lids, they cover them with a cloth, they pour water over the cloth - the cloth retains the water against the surface (the same way the sand does), the water absorbs heat from the vessel, and as the water evaporates the vessel cools down.

  • @84adl2012
    @84adl2012 Před 10 lety +14

    LOVE all your ideas--shows more thought goes into making something with as little to no cost, while incorporating design with function, and with uncompromised functionality.

  • @kalidechastaine5784
    @kalidechastaine5784 Před 3 lety +4

    The round pots are Better, completely wet the Clay pots prior, put sand around and leave in shade ideally. Could even be half inserted in the ground.

  • @skeeterchiggins
    @skeeterchiggins Před 6 lety +37

    Whoa, you living in hell or something? 122F???

    • @binnykhadgi1874
      @binnykhadgi1874 Před 5 lety +4

      So funny 😂😂

    • @ThyBookie
      @ThyBookie Před 5 lety +3

      No wonder he makes all these ac units

    • @samuelmuldoon4839
      @samuelmuldoon4839 Před 4 lety +5

      If you put a thermometer in direct sunlight, the temperature will be wrong. red alcohol thermometers don't really measure air temperature. If you put one in the shade, the result will be very different.

    • @cluelessincalifornia9134
      @cluelessincalifornia9134 Před 4 lety +2

      fwiw sounds like Arizona weather to me.

    • @in_vas_por8810
      @in_vas_por8810 Před 4 lety +1

      Las Vegas or Arizona in the summer.

  • @starsbydaylight
    @starsbydaylight Před 10 lety +39

    Thanks so much for making this video about creating this brilliant Stone-Age :^) fridge. For starters I am definitely going to make 1 Stone-Age-pot-fridge. Here in Ireland electricity-prices are now Brutal. Old Age Pensioners with only a state pension, those who have storage heaters only, can't afford heating their homes. They pack sandwiches, thermos with tea, medicines, wrap up in warm clothes, use their free travel pass, get on a bus or train, travel aimlessly from A to ? and back home again, just to be warm. Heart breaking. That's the doing of the IMF Bankers-Gangsters who have Ireland too financially on her knees. Peace ...

    • @vodafine32dublin27
      @vodafine32dublin27 Před 6 lety

      starsbydaylight

    • @notacrazyperson3416
      @notacrazyperson3416 Před 6 lety +1

      Are you serious, the dole pays 180 a week. Come to NI were minimum wage is 1000 a month and we can afford SSE airtricity mate.

    • @RoamingAdhocrat
      @RoamingAdhocrat Před 6 lety +1

      Don't get food poisoning…

    • @davidschmidt270
      @davidschmidt270 Před 3 lety +2

      I know it's been 7 years friend but I hope your Country is better, ...I'm sure it's not all better but hopefully a little...may God be with you... prayer's and blessings to you and your family and your Countrymen

    • @davidhayes5382
      @davidhayes5382 Před rokem +1

      @@davidschmidt270 best wishes from Ireland 🇮🇪 to you and your family 👪

  • @mikesteacy8387
    @mikesteacy8387 Před 5 lety +1

    I love the little pots. Because, know body could ever tell the size of the big pots when you walked up to them. That's funny stuff.

  • @paigedavis8198
    @paigedavis8198 Před 6 lety +1

    No impact man brought me here. This is crazy!!! How cool!!! A bit extreme for me but half I got a better explanation of what it is and how it works.

  • @desertsun02
    @desertsun02  Před 12 lety +17

    good questions. no, the pots have to be made from something pourous like clay (to allow for air flow).

    • @lucasgreenstock5690
      @lucasgreenstock5690 Před 3 lety

      Can you use salt water? If you were trying to save on fresh water and happened to have salt water could you use that instead?

    • @ladybugbecca8
      @ladybugbecca8 Před 2 lety

      Would it still work if the outer container was made of plastic or metal and the inner was still sand and a clay pot?

    • @hugokp2845
      @hugokp2845 Před 2 lety

      @@lucasgreenstock5690 yes that’s fine

    • @hugokp2845
      @hugokp2845 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ladybugbecca8 ideally not, as it’s reduce the external porous area massively

  • @hedgemcnorry9459
    @hedgemcnorry9459 Před 10 lety +32

    I like the idea of cooling a couple of grapes, or a strawberry :D

  • @desertsun02
    @desertsun02  Před 11 lety +15

    i would think you could use very large pots and still get good cooling. the shape of the container shouldn't matter. square or rectangular pots should work fine too.

  • @Mrs.R.D.Oviatt1776
    @Mrs.R.D.Oviatt1776 Před 3 lety +6

    Shady spot too helps and I sink mine half way in the ground. In a breezy area. Make a video trying that please😁

    • @gwenkilby
      @gwenkilby Před 6 měsíci

      I was gonna say, definitely don't have them in direct sunlight!

    • @inoutterspace
      @inoutterspace Před 2 měsíci +1

      People dig old little refrigerators in the ground and say it works. Actually keep regular refrigerator food in it

  • @cluelessincalifornia9134
    @cluelessincalifornia9134 Před 4 lety +4

    It is most likely that what limits the cooling is the rate at which water can evaporate from the system. Addition additional insulation by additional pots or sand probably won't help much. If you could increase the surface area/volume ratio, you should get a greater cooling rate--so a smaller system might achieve a lower temperature. However you could fit less stuff in it (eg: your grapes example) and would need to re-wet it frequently as it can't hold as much water.
    The primary emergency use I can imagine for a zeer is to keep refrigerated medicines, especially insulin, cooled after a natural disaster until help arrives, or until evacuation becomes possible.

    • @cluelessincalifornia9134
      @cluelessincalifornia9134 Před 4 lety +1

      Oh--I'd also consider improving insulation on top by creating a lid of some kind (inverted small pot or terracotta saucer?) and putting wet sand on top, instead of the wet towel.
      Also key to this system is the pots have to be water permeable--it won't work with a glazed pot. Not sure if you mentioned that.

    • @cathys949
      @cathys949 Před 18 dny

      The sand is not for insulation - it is supposed hold the water against the clay so the breeze blowing around the pot evaporates the water and brings down the temperature inside the inner pot. You need a way to keep the sand wet all the time so there is always water to evaporate.

  • @Mounia_MJD
    @Mounia_MJD Před 5 lety +2

    Hi there!
    Good Idea old idea from the grand parent...
    We gonna try it soon is amazing thing to do!!
    Thank you for the video.

  • @theantithesis1
    @theantithesis1 Před 11 lety +6

    Have you tried soaking the pot in water before assembling? Getting the pot to soak water before adding wet sand may improve performance.

  • @skinpro2000
    @skinpro2000 Před 5 lety +3

    You need to pour more water, one liter is not enough, it will also help if you use cold water, or let ice cubes melt in the sand, the inner pot will be significantly colder, you can actually feel the frigid air inside the inner pot., if you put the wet towel and cover it with one of those pot bases that look like a plate it will stay even colder, and even more if you wet the pot base before putting it on top, it will help keep everything cold inside, try it and make a video about it.

    • @beavisroadhog9629
      @beavisroadhog9629 Před měsícem

      If you need to make an improvised refrigerator, where- smart guy- are the ice cubes going to come from?

  • @MrSheepboy
    @MrSheepboy Před 10 lety +6

    This is awesome! Once again! Would it not be even more effective and efficient if it were buried also? Just a suggestion :)

  • @somebody6048
    @somebody6048 Před 2 lety +1

    You should have made a lid that is the diameter of the most inner pot to cover the pot. And leave the surface area of the outer pots open so the water can evaporate, since it is suppose to be an evaporative cooler, to cool the inner pot and outer pot. And if you can line the lid with aluminum foil, it will keep the inner pot even cooler since the aluminum reflect the heat from outside from entering the inner chamber of the inner pot.

  • @aneesahmad641
    @aneesahmad641 Před rokem

    Really appreciate the idea ,I will apply it ...I have to wait a couple weeks before I buy a refrigerator , thank you 💕

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před rokem +1

      hi. i'm glad it's helping you!

    • @aneesahmad641
      @aneesahmad641 Před rokem +1

      @@desertsun02 it's really helpful,
      For the last few days it helped me with storing eggs , milk and wheat dough ....
      Dunno how to send a pic here , however I'm grateful...
      😊❤️

  • @TheRealTomahawk
    @TheRealTomahawk Před 11 měsíci

    This reminds me of those 3-D printed houses that I was watching today because in those 3-D printed houses, the there is a gap in between parts of the 3-D print or I imagine you could pour sand into it and I assume use the same technique add water and it will keep the house insulated and cool like this pot in pot cooler.

  • @ryanelliott4700
    @ryanelliott4700 Před 4 lety +1

    Mohammed Bah Abba Nigerian invention won a Rolex Award for the Invention.

    • @user-bh2zc9wb2k
      @user-bh2zc9wb2k Před měsícem

      Oh bullshit man...this concept of evaporative cooling has been around forever....Your Nigerian buddy probably won the Rolex for coming up with the most innovative scam or for being the best drug pusher of the year.😂😂

  • @Treva2000
    @Treva2000 Před 9 lety +10

    How cool will the pots get when you set them in the shade instead of direct sunlight?

    • @MrSmoothbanana
      @MrSmoothbanana Před 8 lety

      +Treva2000
      it must be iin the sun , as the it works off the wet bulb temperature, air cools to a temp pf 40 degree F
      Reply ·

  • @jycfrnkl
    @jycfrnkl Před 10 lety +3

    Inside a home where the average temp was 70-80 degrees, a 30-40 degree cooler difference would make it possible to keep milk cool. Thanks for posting, I've seen huge pots used in Africa so farmers can get their crops to market without the vegetables spoiling.

  • @Based_Face
    @Based_Face Před rokem +2

    This is called a zeer pot refrigerator btw.

  • @vixwolf2037
    @vixwolf2037 Před měsícem

    A darker towel might be more effective because the white towel will be reflective; as a black towel should get hotter therefore evaporating at a quicker rate- but thats just a suggestion based on color science as black absorbs all wavelengths. Where as white reflects all wavelengths (except when it comes to paint that's a bit more complicated)
    Edit:typo

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před měsícem

      hi there. i'm not sure. the towel might get hotter if it's dark and transfer some of that heat into the fridge? i'd be curious to know what others think.

  • @roseanndewitz9314
    @roseanndewitz9314 Před 11 lety +10

    I was wondering if maybe you added some rock salt to the sand (as they do to freeze ice cream) , if it would be cooler? Just a thought!
    ?

    • @ramrod132
      @ramrod132 Před 4 lety +11

      I know this is old, but I'll answer it anyways. It's not a bad thought, but I don't think it would help. When water changes from a solid to a liquid or a liquid to a gas, it absorbs energy from its surroundings and cools them. Salt chemically forces ice to melt, and that melting absorbs heat which is why it gets colder.
      This pot works because the liquid water changes to a gas (evaporates), and absorbs energy when it does. The salt wouldn't make it evaporate faster, so it wouldn't make the pot cooler.

  • @technoforever888
    @technoforever888 Před 4 lety +7

    Other videos show this zeer pot off the ground for ventilation. That could cool it off more, as well.

  • @alexanderrahl7034
    @alexanderrahl7034 Před 10 měsíci

    "Literally gets so hot in my yard the thermometer busted"
    Peak humanity right there.
    "Its inhospitable"
    "Nah, we'll make it work." 😂

  • @sherryk30
    @sherryk30 Před 7 lety +23

    taking it out of the direct sun will drop that temperature, too.

  • @Mounia_MJD
    @Mounia_MJD Před 5 lety +2

    Hi again!
    another idea I saw it in other video, that we make a hole large in the soil and put inside in the hole a pot, without any pot inside !
    After put a little bit of water in the corner, Time to time ;)
    By by.

  • @soinat9682
    @soinat9682 Před 3 lety

    you’re the coolest. my new fave page thank u so much

  • @garygartin2757
    @garygartin2757 Před 10 lety +4

    Would using vermiculite (from a garden center), be a better insulator? It would also absorb more water. It should be worth trying.

  • @mystique6444
    @mystique6444 Před 3 lety

    Appreciated the temperature statistics

  • @thejoyofthelordismystrengt1695

    Could you imagine how much energy one could save if houses in dry hot areas were built like this.

    • @edi9892
      @edi9892 Před rokem

      Don't forget high ceilings and opposing windows that remove hot air...

  • @Heinrich99
    @Heinrich99 Před 2 měsíci

    You should make a whole clay house with an inner clay layer with sand in between and have some kind of misting or water system for the center you would never need air conditioning.

  • @christinebaker3293
    @christinebaker3293 Před 11 lety +4

    Thanks for the video and testing with 3 pots. I'm wondering if there is a difference in performance depending on the sizes of the pots. I'm off the grid and really would like a place outside my fridge (which is really a freezer that runs several times a day) to store tomatoes and Armenian cukes. The tomatoes aren't supposed to get very cold anyway or they lose flavor, so this would be better than a fridge.
    How big could they be while still having good cooling? Do they have to be round?

  • @johnndavis7647
    @johnndavis7647 Před rokem

    I hope to experiment with this idea.
    I hope to get two pots big enough to hold a gallon glass jar.
    I hope to set the pots up on two layers of offset bricks.
    On the first layer of bricks lay a 12 volt fan horizontally. The fan is direct drive off of a 12 volt solar panel.
    The zeer pot sits on the upper layer of bricks.
    The theory is that the zeer pot stays in the shade and the solar panel stays in the sun.
    The hotter the sun gets the faster the fan runs.
    The fan will increase the rate of evaporation cooling the pots.
    I am also interested in finding out if there is any improvement in performance using salt instead of sand between the pots.
    Salt is hydoscopic. It pulls moisture
    Out of the air.
    What I want to do is set this close to my chicken coop. Put a cup of lime desolved into a gallon of water and put it in the gallon jar inside the cooler. I hope to store my excess eggs in this cooler. They should keep for up to a year in the lime water. Keeping them cool doesn't hurt either.
    In the markets in North Africa they
    Make a bigger cooler like this for storing vegetables.
    They set four or five plastic laundry baskets on a brick floor then they build a wall of bricks around the baskets. Then they build a second wall four inches away from the first wall and fill the void with sand. They wet the sand and the bricks and it does the same thing as the zeet pot.. They put an insulated lid over the cooler.
    These are built under thatched roof shelters to keep the sun off of them.
    If you have a lot of stuff to keep cool this might be a better way.
    Big pots aren't cheap. Bricks are sometimes free.

  • @blackthornknives
    @blackthornknives Před 6 lety +1

    Excellent experiment

  • @jimmartin7899
    @jimmartin7899 Před 8 lety +2

    Could you not fill copper capillary coils with nitrogen and have a closed system within the pot to keep things frozen or cold? Not to mention making a cold sink for home cooling needs?

  • @rommelfcc
    @rommelfcc Před 6 měsíci

    Good video man, 👍😊 put the thermometer in the shade out of direct sunlight...
    Evacuated thermal tube heaters can get up to 300+ degrees Celsius...
    Larger the light collector area, that hight the temp...
    Keep the thermometer in the shade so you can test the air temperature not the sun thermal infrared temp output, which can be very high 😳
    Oh or can invest in a laser thermometer...

  • @noneofyourbusiness2437
    @noneofyourbusiness2437 Před 4 lety +4

    So, what would happen if you put one of these inside an even larger one? Would it cool the smaller one even more? I mean obviously there has to be a limit, but as long as its hot enough for evaporation to take place couldn't you theoretically just keep making larger and larger pots or sealed brick chambers with layers of wet sand between them in order to fit the smaller pots until evaporation is slowed to the point of not making a difference anymore?
    Am I over thinking this? Probably. I just find it interesting to think about.

    • @superfluidity
      @superfluidity Před 2 lety +2

      You have to have airflow to keep the evaporative cooling going- if you have anything damp inside a sealed space then if it doesn't dry out eventually it will bring the humidity up to 100% and evaporation stops, and it doesn't cool any further. Then over time the temperature equalizes with whatever's outside of that space.

  • @ImhotepVII648
    @ImhotepVII648 Před dnem

    Can i use this clay-pot to store milk & meat? also, how often should i reintroduce water to the sand between the pots?

  • @badbenito
    @badbenito Před 10 měsíci

    I wonder how cool it can get if it's in the shade.

  • @MrRasZee
    @MrRasZee Před 3 lety +2

    thats a 20 degree centigrade temperature drop.. thats a lot

  • @lm2193
    @lm2193 Před 9 lety +3

    works for dry weather country.

  • @hassanraza-zc5rp
    @hassanraza-zc5rp Před rokem +1

    I'll try this with my house mate.

    • @cathys949
      @cathys949 Před 18 dny

      Before AC in homes became common, in the dry desert areas they used "swamp cooler" units, that would be large panels of wet fiber with fans blowing on it, to cool by evaporation.

  • @libragirl4471
    @libragirl4471 Před 11 dny

    Do a video on how to make a modern cooler more efficient using this science.

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před 10 dny

      interesting idea. i'll give it some thought 🙂

  • @CarbonConscious
    @CarbonConscious Před 7 lety +4

    Would this also work inside the house or does the pot really need to exposed to the sun to get proper evaporation going?

    • @fredhampton321
      @fredhampton321 Před 3 lety

      Yes it will work in doors as well

    • @itwasentme17
      @itwasentme17 Před 3 lety +1

      I think as long as there is wind or air flow to trigger evaporation then it will work.
      I’ve read that the zeer pot is less effective or not effective at all once you get to humidity above 40% or something like that though.

    • @libragirl4471
      @libragirl4471 Před 11 dny

      ​@@itwasentme17dang, I'm in Florida. I want to try this.

  • @brians7927
    @brians7927 Před 5 lety +1

    Does it matter what kind of sand it is? Like would fuji beach sand work just as good as the Sahara desert sand?

  • @BloodTar
    @BloodTar Před 12 lety +1

    If you have to have it outside, I would place it against the house on the north side and that way it'll never see any direct sunlight and you might get lower temperature readings. The best thing to do is to probably bury it up to an inch of the rim.

    • @sandybarbee8401
      @sandybarbee8401 Před 2 lety

      NO sun on the north side of your house ???? WHERE do you live ?????

    • @BloodTar
      @BloodTar Před 2 lety

      @@sandybarbee8401 In the United States the north side of your house gets the least amount of sun....especially during the winter months.

  • @keefsmiff
    @keefsmiff Před 7 měsíci

    I fill mine with ice from the fridge ,it works so much better

  • @jasonschulte8133
    @jasonschulte8133 Před 6 lety

    I am an engineer. A domestic electric powered refrigerator cools down one enclosed space. Industrial cryogenic refrigerators that cool down several dozen degrees below zero are, as a bit of an simplification, a refrigerator in a refrigerator. In other words, one refrigerator cools down a refrigerated space to a temperature well below what the primary refrigerator can do. I wonder if a "pot in pot in pot in pot" system like this could cool it down more than 40 degrees. If the ambien temperature is 38 Celsius and you want to cool it down to 2 degree Celsius, could it be done?

  • @Hawtload
    @Hawtload Před 2 lety

    living in AZ like: "it got so hot the thermometer exploded like in Looney Toons"

  • @hot2warm
    @hot2warm Před 9 lety +1

    Have you tried this with a liter of frozen bottled water as an "ice pack?"

  • @jeffpiper7430
    @jeffpiper7430 Před 5 měsíci

    u forgot to mention best to use unfired pots as then the clay will soak some of the water in m on a mates property back in the mid 80s we used a single pot with a lid sitting on a saucer we kept filled with water .. lol we got use to boiling up green meat for dinner

  • @artsymamanana
    @artsymamanana Před rokem

    White marble is cooling, I wonder if crushed white marble would work, and if there were some sort of tiny fan, such as a little solar fan blowing on it to speed up evaporation.

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před rokem

      hey there. both are interesting ideas. ✔

  • @jeffbeck9347
    @jeffbeck9347 Před 3 měsíci

    Bro, I think blanketing the sides of the pot with a towel hinders the process of evaporation. The sides I think need to breathe to effectively draw out heat from the inside.

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před 3 měsíci

      hi. that is correct. i don't use blanket (towel) on the sides just the top. it holds in the cold and adds cold to the unit

  • @240x9
    @240x9 Před 9 lety +11

    How much cooler it would be if it were put into the ground?

    • @GASHUBOY
      @GASHUBOY Před 8 lety +4

      +240X That's actually a great question. I guess we'd have to just try it since nobody in-the-know has answered.

    • @michaelburgess413
      @michaelburgess413 Před 7 lety +9

      240X I buried a Styrofoam cooler in the ground at my Arizona home. ice stays ice for 3-4 days. It isn't cold beer cold, but it keeps my wine chilled well, even if it is 120 degrees out. I also keep the location shaded from the sun.

    • @240x9
      @240x9 Před 7 lety

      Kick Ass I wondered if that would work any better!

    • @braveheartlioness
      @braveheartlioness Před 2 lety

      @@michaelburgess413 I'd love to know how to prevent the ice from melting to make it a perpetual freezer....I love everyone's input!

  • @myfreetimearabegum7564

    Nice sharing

  • @Akariii689
    @Akariii689 Před rokem

    Bro it’s 2022 already good thing we have refrigerator 💀

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před rokem

      hi. very true. (but this can work for people 'in a pinch'). also good for use in 'less developed' areas.

  • @josephdupont
    @josephdupont Před 6 lety +2

    why not use this technique to extend the ice life in an ice chest????

    • @libragirl4471
      @libragirl4471 Před 11 dny

      Yes I want to see some experiments trying variations of this. Get some old yard sale coolers and make a video

  • @hardythistle7334
    @hardythistle7334 Před 3 lety +1

    Interesting but it would only work in dry climates.

  • @sarahhavillamelooliveira5825

    I'll be making one to store fruits and fresh watter in my room (where I live is pretty hot and a small fridge just for me would be a total waste)

  • @crazysquirrel9425
    @crazysquirrel9425 Před 23 dny

    Those do not work well or at all in humid conditions.
    Lower the relative humidity (dew point perhaps) the cooler it will become.
    Avoid setting them in the ground or any other heat sinking surface.
    And keep out of the sun!
    Also, the Zeer pot was invented in North Africa some 2,000 years ago.

  • @demeteriorico3963
    @demeteriorico3963 Před 7 lety

    thank you for posting you are a blessing.

  • @My_friend_is_ReaReaOnPaws

    What about trying it in the shade?

  • @brittanydeppe6595
    @brittanydeppe6595 Před 2 lety

    Wonder how we could do this on a large scale for an outside dog house.. would be great! Could connect it to a 5 gallon refillable water tank to keep the sand wet. 🤔

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před 2 lety +1

      one idea would be to make the dog house using some porous brick or brick material for the sides of the dog house. (make a double wall then put sand in between the walls. wet the sand occasionally. that's just a quick idea off the top of my head.

  • @Keepingitreals
    @Keepingitreals Před 5 lety +1

    just like aztec gardening system

  • @janvingst
    @janvingst Před rokem

    how about if you put 2 pots inside the 2 pot fridge - with a gap of air inbetween? i would think it cools even lover - but will probably take longer to cool down.

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před rokem

      hi. the extra insulation might help. it's worth trying 🙂✔

  • @docink6175
    @docink6175 Před 2 lety

    could this be used as an air cooler? Maybe drill holes around the bottoms of both pots for pvc pipes tp get air flow in and an exhaust fan on top or an intake tube from the lid that almost reaches the bottom

  • @adnel4142
    @adnel4142 Před 3 lety

    Pour a little sand then a little water till it reaches the top for total saturation

  • @mkmason2002
    @mkmason2002 Před 9 lety +1

    Would it be better to keep the frig in a canning room where it's 60-65* ?

    • @MrSmoothbanana
      @MrSmoothbanana Před 8 lety

      +mkmason2002
      it must be iin the sun , as the it works off the wet bulb temperature, air cools to a temp pf 40 degree F
      Reply ·

  • @MoMo-bq6yz
    @MoMo-bq6yz Před rokem

    I'm thinking of making an underground ice test.

  • @Winter-qs4ds
    @Winter-qs4ds Před 2 lety

    If I put a terracotta dish on top would that stay cool? I've seen some where you use the terracotta water catcher to cover the top. I was wondering if it would give feral cats a place to cool off a little bit if it's in the shade

  • @Hawtload
    @Hawtload Před 2 lety

    you can cool things with water and air
    you can boil things with sun and a reflective surface

  • @AndrewHelgeCox
    @AndrewHelgeCox Před 2 lety

    Since they are powered by evaporative cooling, is the inner chamber cooler if the pot is in sun rather than in shade?

  • @gein2287
    @gein2287 Před 2 lety

    Holy shit, 121 degrees. Dude, live somewhere else. Holy heat from hell.

  • @J.Feliciano-FOREVER-JAM-N

    125 degrees out 😮,
    Where do you live?
    Get’n 110-115 up here in northern cal above the Bay Area and that’s hot enough

  • @reneelosie2644
    @reneelosie2644 Před 2 lety

    Put it in the shade with a lid on it then the towel.

  • @jolj1
    @jolj1 Před rokem

    If you have land, build a root cellar, if you do not have land you are not really readily to go off grid.

  • @wompstopm123
    @wompstopm123 Před 8 lety +2

    how the hell is it 125 degrees out? where do you live? mars?

    • @stipeivancev5985
      @stipeivancev5985 Před 8 lety +1

      lol mars cant have temperature higher then -100

    • @wompstopm123
      @wompstopm123 Před 8 lety

      Stipe Ivancev the hottest it got for me where i live this year is 115f but that was with 100% humidity and a uv index of maximum. so it really felt like 140f

  • @israalbarahmeh1298
    @israalbarahmeh1298 Před 5 lety

    You forgot to put more salt that is the secret for a cooler pot and to dug a not to deep hole ablut 3 feet in your yard and put it inside with the towel and that will be very cool

  • @hartplanet356
    @hartplanet356 Před 25 dny

    Works better if you place it in the shade.

  • @thatcrazytoaster
    @thatcrazytoaster Před rokem +1

    but in reality, in the normal brain of a person, one would be looking to set these up out of the sun or create a shade or the likes.

  • @colleenforrest7936
    @colleenforrest7936 Před 6 lety +1

    It may sound counterintuitive, but would putting the clay pot in direct sunlight and cutting the towel shorter so it didn't cast large shadows over the pot make this work better?
    It's my understanding these pots work using evaporation cooling, so that means the faster it evoporates the faster it should cool? Would mean adding water more often. Would a clay saucer filled with wet sand over the top work better than the towel?

    • @chrillemartinez5950
      @chrillemartinez5950 Před 6 lety

      Does it cool better if we add water more often?

    • @superfluidity
      @superfluidity Před 2 lety +1

      Sunlight only makes the water evaporate by heating it. The cooling effect of the evaporation can never be bigger than the heating effect of the thing that's driving it. So no, best to put it in the shade. But if you can put it in a breeze that will speed up the evaporation and help.

    • @superfluidity
      @superfluidity Před 2 lety

      ​@@chrillemartinez5950 If any part of the surface dries out then that bit will stop providing cooling. So yes it will cool best if you add water often enough to keep the entire surface of both pots damp.

    • @colleenforrest7936
      @colleenforrest7936 Před 2 lety

      @@superfluidity next bit of wondering. If you put an appropriately sized mesh dew harvesters net set up in a in a cylinder shape to drip water into the dirt layer, could you eliminate or at least significantly reduce the amount of human time to add water to the pot?

    • @superfluidity
      @superfluidity Před 2 lety +1

      @@colleenforrest7936 Perhaps - but this fridge and mesh dew harvesters can't both work at the same time. The mesh harvesters only work in low temperature / high humidity conditions (relative humidity of more than 100%). The fridge only works in higher temperature / low humidity conditions.
      But maybe the dew harvesters could work in the cool night / morning and then you could use the water to run the fridge during the day. But I think you'd need very big dew harvesters to collect enough water to be useful.

  • @awardedaqua580
    @awardedaqua580 Před 6 lety

    Do you just put food inside there.

  • @marlene-rr2ih
    @marlene-rr2ih Před 2 lety

    Can I put canned food or food in glass jars in the Zeer? I have an extremely large clay pot that would take another large pot inside. Does it work as well with larger pots? Thank you.

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před 2 lety +2

      hi there. you should be able to put both canned food and food in glass jars in the Zeer. anything you can put in a regular refrigerator you can put in the zeer. it works great with large pots. 😎✔

  • @naleenidas8444
    @naleenidas8444 Před 4 lety

    I need this sort of cooler to keep my Amaryllis bulbs dormant for a couple of months. Did you say 40 deg fahrenheit it cools down to? That is 4.4 deg celcius! Does it really get that cool inside?

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před 4 lety

      hi. it won't get down to 40F (but it can drop the temp up to 40F)

  • @mannyalali2022
    @mannyalali2022 Před měsícem

    How about using this to cool water for fog system

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před měsícem

      maybe scale it up. I pictured one of those clay chimeneas (freestanding clay fireplaces) when I read this comment. might work?

  • @bclendenen1
    @bclendenen1 Před 9 lety +1

    I don't think I would want to keep meat in it. Salt would be better for that.

  • @erinlong1987
    @erinlong1987 Před rokem

    Can you use this to cool the air in a room?

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před rokem

      hi. you'd have to scale it up ...but i can see possibilities

  • @mordys6305
    @mordys6305 Před 5 lety

    Viva las vegas! If you plant something in it, it should keep the soil cool yea?

  • @uday20101
    @uday20101 Před 9 měsíci

    How long does it keep the veggie fresh

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před 9 měsíci +1

      the average time is 3 to 5 days but that will vary based on the temps that you get.

  • @anokhilal325
    @anokhilal325 Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks for making this videos

  • @mkmason2002
    @mkmason2002 Před 9 lety +1

    Do you know if fine or coarse sand is more efficient?

    • @fenderstratguy
      @fenderstratguy Před 3 lety

      That's a great question. Seems like the moisture having more mobility through the medium is important, so I'm thinking possibly coarse is better? But that's only an uneducated guess.

  • @marlene-rr2ih
    @marlene-rr2ih Před 2 lety

    When you bury the pot, don't insects eat the food inside?

    • @desertsun02
      @desertsun02  Před 2 lety +1

      hi there. i don't bury the pots. i leave them out (so that the natural air currents can pass over the unit. the towel on top is a pretty good seal

  • @johnnavarro9169
    @johnnavarro9169 Před rokem

    Better off the ground in the shade and in some area that catches a breeze.