HOW TO: DIY Aquarium chiller TUTORIAL

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  • čas přidán 18. 03. 2014
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    Some hobbyists live in areas where it might get very hot in certain months. Cooling their aquarium water on a constant basis is something they might need to consider.
    In this video, I show you how to build a chiller that you can do at home that will not only work well, but look good, be functional and be cost effective.
    I wanted to keep this project under $100 and be universal for any aquarium. As with all my videos, I also needed to create a project that many people would actually be able to do. So simplicity is always key.
    Smaller chillers start around $500 for a chiller rated for around 50 gallons.
    This project will only cost around $100 for the same size tank, and use less power.
    More so, this project will serve to inspire you with a simple idea.
    After running on an aquarium for 12hrs, it has no problem with dropping the temperature by 3-5C.
    I ran this in my house. I used it on a tank that was at room temp of 22C. It dropped the tank temp to 17C within 12hrs.
    It might be able to cool even more, however, i ran it for only 12hrs with 200 GPH on a 50 gallon barrel. If you slow the flow more, it will cool faster.

Komentáře • 343

  • @garick
    @garick Před 8 lety +1

    I've seen your videos from time to time and just subscribed now. Thanks man, you spout a lot of good info.

  • @mazzosmark8985
    @mazzosmark8985 Před 10 lety +138

    This setup is not at its maximum efficiency, only the part of the hose that is exposed will get cooled, meaning that this setup is probably at half efficiency. How i would do this? take a second hand freezer and 100+ ft of hose, then unpack the hoses to a mess, and put them in a bucket. Fill the bucket with water and put it in the freezer. this could be done in a fridge too, and it would be much more efficient, because water tranfers heat (or cold) 30 times faster than air. Hope this helped, not trying to be negative :)

    • @PurpleSpades
      @PurpleSpades Před 10 lety +20

      Very nice, that was clever I just had to comment. This is a great example of sharing and improving one's ideas. Thanks for the input.

    • @OmarTheAtheistAziz
      @OmarTheAtheistAziz Před 6 lety +7

      why does the hose have to be unpacked to a mess?

    • @syauqisan9008
      @syauqisan9008 Před 6 lety +8

      because when the cable is mess, the freeze can reach the center of the hose

    • @OmarTheAtheistAziz
      @OmarTheAtheistAziz Před 6 lety +5

      but can a 100 ft messy hose fit into a bucket, into a fridge? it'll take up more space..either 75 ft messy hose or 100 ft rolled up hose..there's a tradeoff...also not trying to be negative

    • @dallimamma
      @dallimamma Před 5 lety +2

      Omar Aziz ::: Maybe more surface area exposed to cooling?

  • @ryanweiland4379
    @ryanweiland4379 Před 10 lety +4

    I wish this video came out before I bought my 1/2 hp chiller I really like your videos I actually made my sump after watching your DIY acrylic tank build very informative keep up the good work

    • @juliussatter2765
      @juliussatter2765 Před 5 měsíci

      Doesn't look like drinking water safe hose usually its white maid out of vinal like for RV potable water. & stainless coil would be better to conduct thermal activity much more proficient. 70 to 100 bucks would get you there. fridge 150 vinal back to tank. don't harm your fish being unsafe..

  • @Faris2642
    @Faris2642 Před 10 lety +2

    great heat exchanger idea and very informative. Thanks for the video Joey and I will be considering it for the summer time.
    I would probably add watching energy consumption and fine tweeking the heater and the fridge. I don't want to have the water heater and the mini fridge to have an epic battle over my power bill
    you're the king

  • @fishlaw1
    @fishlaw1 Před 10 lety

    Great DIY vid Joey you are truly the best at what you do bruh.

  • @dipenhansawala1244
    @dipenhansawala1244 Před 3 lety +6

    Can you pl make this video again with new and latest technology. Also for large aquarium.

  • @Ducati_V4S
    @Ducati_V4S Před 10 lety

    The best idea for chiller, Joy!

  • @jaysonmetsfan
    @jaysonmetsfan Před 10 lety

    Great idea! Seeing manufacturer chillers it just looks like something you can't make yourself. Awesome video!

  • @915Mang
    @915Mang Před 10 lety

    Pretty creative and effective! Nice job man!

  • @DarkEnder29
    @DarkEnder29 Před 8 lety +4

    I know what my wife is gonna say but she doesn't have to know until its done lol
    I have a finished attic (man cave/office) that I'd love to put another tank in but in the summer it can get pretty toasty up there. This is a great idea, although I'll have to get a second mini-fridge!
    I just got my first aquarium about 3 weeks ago (30 gallon) and already I want another but the living room is off limits...for now! I did get 2 plecos which will hopefully outgrow the one tank and convince her we need at least another 50-60 gallon tank in a couple years!
    The basement will make an awesome fish room someday but it'll take alot of work and is unnecessary atm. Watching your videos certainly inspires me to fix it up though!

  • @SlimTim_dirty_aquatics
    @SlimTim_dirty_aquatics Před 10 lety

    Very awesome DIY build, have to remember this one.

  • @FlockensNekroparlor
    @FlockensNekroparlor Před 3 lety +12

    For this project, wouldn't you want a hose with *less* insulating properties? So the heat from the water can actually transfer out of the hose? I get needing insulating the bits outside the fridge, but inside I think something like a vinyl tubing would be better.
    I guess that would be more expensive though...

    • @gokuzawa268
      @gokuzawa268 Před rokem

      Maybe garden hose outside of the fridge, and then stainless steel. But it doesn't have to be a closed system, you can use 2 waterpumps and a bucket inside the fridge.

  • @Alypinkflower
    @Alypinkflower Před 10 lety

    amazing joey..another success to add to your video!!!

  • @LeoPazzo
    @LeoPazzo Před 10 lety +1

    Bro
    That was so sick
    Mint love the idea. Fantastic job buddy. Extremely impressed.
    Another banging video.

  • @CheapskateGardener
    @CheapskateGardener Před 10 lety +1

    Hey I seen you on the local news tonight and I could not help myself but checking out your page ,, Love supporting local talent ,, love what your doing

    • @thekingofdiy
      @thekingofdiy  Před 10 lety

      Thats awesome! Thanks for tuning in.

    • @CheapskateGardener
      @CheapskateGardener Před 10 lety

      No problem I might have a few ideas I would like to bounce at you some time :)

  • @avasquez6140
    @avasquez6140 Před 10 lety +5

    Awesome vid again my friend! Also at the same time you can make your own frozen fish food in the freezer section...

  • @oscarlover131
    @oscarlover131 Před 10 lety

    I am amazed Joey! I've been looking at various chillers new and used, I desperately need one living in California but it's just waaay cost ineffective. This design is so simple! I'm definitely going to be using this design on my tank. This is by far the most helpful project you have shown us!

    • @thekingofdiy
      @thekingofdiy  Před 10 lety +1

      Thats great news! I had you guys from that area in mind when i made the video.
      I hope you honestly dont find this is y most useful project to date though! Jeez, i wouldnt even rank it in the top 5!
      Maybe because i am bias as im in canada and hot weather is a blessing for the 2 months we have it! lol

    • @zenithskoll
      @zenithskoll Před 10 lety +2

      ***** This one can be in some people's top 10s, mine included. For people who keep axolotls and other cool water animals in hot places like Texas, this video is a life saver. Plus, this one is so easy to set up it would be really hard to mess up!

    • @kamaljyotikashyap9846
      @kamaljyotikashyap9846 Před 4 lety

      Did you use it? How much temperature drop were you able to get?

  • @lysjocksan
    @lysjocksan Před 10 lety

    Really loved this! I already have a mini fridge sitting in the garage. My chiller just hasn't been working properly and there's just no way I could afford another chiller. It's getting warmer here in Atlanta, so I was getting very worried for my axolotls. My axies are very grateful for your awesome idea :)

  • @JoyZofSoRRoW
    @JoyZofSoRRoW Před 4 lety

    Wow... I went to a boating and fishing convention that has a program for classes to hatch and grow trout for 2 months and I thought about doing something like that at home but you need a chiller for them and I have seen how expensive they are. This may actually make it a possibility for me. Thanks for the video.

  • @marthdaeglin
    @marthdaeglin Před 6 lety +8

    That's a pretty big chiller! I wonder how the running costs compare to out-of-the-box chillers in the longhaul. I also wonder about alternatives to the garden hose, it should be interesting to see how the insulation and cost varies by material type. It's crazy how easy it is to heat a tank and how difficult it is to cool one off...

  • @evrosgeorgiou
    @evrosgeorgiou Před 10 lety

    thanks man u just saved me around 700 euros it gets really hot over here (Cyprus Greek island ) love your chanel and your videos keep it up !!!!!

  • @briansfishtanks
    @briansfishtanks Před 10 lety

    Another great DIY! Great idea!

  • @gloday8162
    @gloday8162 Před 10 lety

    Great job, im definitely going to try this

  • @brendahodgins
    @brendahodgins Před 10 lety

    That is awesome Joey!

  • @FishyDrizzy
    @FishyDrizzy Před 10 lety

    Great video!! Very informative!

  • @Larry-rr6ko
    @Larry-rr6ko Před 3 lety

    Wow man you have come so so far. Thank you for this video

  • @nickjm37fordel1
    @nickjm37fordel1 Před 10 lety

    That was very clever, something you would not think of !

  • @nyinfamous2k2
    @nyinfamous2k2 Před 10 lety +5

    DUDE YOU ARE A GENIUS, thats such a great idea. I wonder if the pump could be hooked up to an apex controller and have it turn on when the temp gets to warm and off when reached its desired temp.

  • @pauljd86
    @pauljd86 Před 9 lety +1

    I'm very new to this but have always been intrigued with the plumbing etc. My question is I noticed that heaters are used alot so when would someone actually want or need a cooler and would you recommend one for a 50 gallon tank or less? Ps I cant stop watching your videos. So many cool and smart ideas to watch. Thanks for everything!

  • @Ac19999
    @Ac19999 Před 5 lety +4

    I have a theoretical question. If, per say, I wanted to do this with a dedicated freezer (instead of a fridge) and placed the hose in a bucket full of water, the water in the bucket would freeze, but the moving water inside the hose wouldn't freeze but it would be cold, correct? I don't know much about freezing points or thermodynamics but I'm open to suggestions. Thank you!

  • @sammccoy2677
    @sammccoy2677 Před 8 lety +2

    This is great! Although I am confused as to where the ends of the hose hook up to.Also, I have an axolotl which needs really cool temperatures so would it still be necessary to have a heater?

  • @Lyleamarie
    @Lyleamarie Před 10 lety

    This is ingenious!

  • @Premislao89
    @Premislao89 Před 10 lety +2

    Haha xD Biggest DIY aquarium accesory so far. Suprised me totally with this fridge xD

  • @JacksonBolt
    @JacksonBolt Před 10 lety

    Another great video

  • @ReeferGil
    @ReeferGil Před 10 lety

    Great idea!

  • @cesargonzales4819
    @cesargonzales4819 Před 3 lety

    Nice video. Ty for the info.

  • @sum1t0m0
    @sum1t0m0 Před 9 lety

    Superrrr great idea thanxxxx alot . U r the best

  • @chandlerdavis952
    @chandlerdavis952 Před 10 lety +3

    Awesome idea. Couple of minor ideas. Would also cut both ends off both hoses and connect them with a hose barb so as not to run the chance of introducing metal Contamination in saltwater setups and its about 10 gallons per 50watt for about a 10 degree drop in temp with about 100 gallons per of flow per hour or about 2 gallons per watt is optimal. if you slow the flow down too much or have too high will not work as well and you could burn out the compressor. If no sump Plumb the pump inside the fridge you already have the heat transfer from the pump if you were planning on using a submersible one anyways.

  • @chaturaindika
    @chaturaindika Před 8 lety +15

    Guys what if we put bucket inside the refrigerator and plumb tubing directly to that bucket ? so that bucket water directly cool by refrigerator and pushes back to main tank .

  • @kcrunchone
    @kcrunchone Před 10 lety

    Thanks Joey.... Was this in response to my request or was this something that you had on the way. I thought of something similar but glad to hear and see your prospective on it. Now I just need to find a small enough fridge that will fit in my storage area.

  • @rawellbaum
    @rawellbaum Před 10 lety

    Nice Joey!

  • @Richie5480
    @Richie5480 Před 2 lety

    Great idea 💡.

  • @vincescipione7875
    @vincescipione7875 Před 10 lety

    This is so stupidly simple. I love this. Why didn't I think of this?

  • @genealameda1163
    @genealameda1163 Před 10 lety

    Great idea!!

  • @bbrandon21l
    @bbrandon21l Před 10 lety

    cant wait to try this out. sounds like a great money saving idea. i have to wait until deployment is over with. What size frig would you recommend for a 130 gallon tank?

  • @zachvydra9309
    @zachvydra9309 Před 9 lety +1

    ***** Great idea! I have a question for you though; have you ever found that you've had condensation on the glass from the water temp level being lower than the room temp? Thanks!

  • @Bigmunoz11
    @Bigmunoz11 Před 10 lety

    epic idea brother

  • @revywilson5648
    @revywilson5648 Před rokem +1

    WAIT!!! I CAN'T BE CREATIVE! I need a video showing how to connect it to a pump

  • @omarkhamis2008
    @omarkhamis2008 Před 10 lety +2

    Hey Joey, did you consider using some aluminum pipes in the fridge to exchange better? I also find those water hoses always leaving a taste in the water, and perhaps leaving bad chemicals in the water.
    Have you tested if the compressor gets to work all the time without rest and perhaps failing.

  • @ckennedy001
    @ckennedy001 Před 4 lety +1

    You could also use an addition coil in your sump for the heat/cold transfer and if it is a closed system, you could use a freezer and have an antifreeze solution in the hose and bucket in the freezer. This would allow a much colder exchange range and may not require as much tubing. This also would prevent an toxins from cheap hoses entering your tank and killing off your expensive fish or corals.

  • @sdj9776
    @sdj9776 Před 8 lety +1

    I had thought about doing this some 20+ years ago when I was planning a reef tank with metal halide and florescent fixtures for lighting. Things happened and I never did built that tank (in fact, I left the hobby altogether). I had envisioned however submerging the tubing in bucket of water while in the fridge. As water is changes temp less quickly than air, (conducts heat better too) the extra liquid mass would help regulate the temp inside the fridge which would allow it to cycle less often thereby saving on energy bills.

    • @sdj9776
      @sdj9776 Před 8 lety +1

      +sdj9776 By putting the hose in a bucket of water, you could probably get away with using less hose which would mean less work for your pump or powerhead since there would be less resistance and less water mass that it would need to push through the hose.

  • @debbiethomas3687
    @debbiethomas3687 Před 6 lety

    I don't keep fish, but do keep cloud forest orchids, many of which like cool temps around 10C (50F) and I struggle to provide the right environment in the winter. This seems like a really good idea, if I can figure out how to do it using fans to extract the air to the fridge and return it without causing a drop in the humidty level (needs to be 80% or more).

  • @looncan7484
    @looncan7484 Před 10 lety

    awesome idea thanks, i'm using little dinky water tubes so i should be able to fit mass amounts of tubing, it's not the expense of chillers what makes it a great trick, it's being able to do this anywhere no matter what you have at hand that makes this the better option to learn, many thanks again...

    • @winstonwright3613
      @winstonwright3613 Před 6 lety

      Did you complete your project? How'd it work with that hose instead and how much were you able to fit. Did you use A bucket?

  • @Tiersmoke92555
    @Tiersmoke92555 Před 2 lety +1

    Small chunk of advice for anyone doing this type of chiller. Add a water vessel to submerge your coil in. A high salt solution works well to transfer heat and provide a buffer from temp changes when opening the door preserving the duel use of the mini fridge.

  • @tism3789
    @tism3789 Před 10 lety

    Thats bloody clever!

  • @TheSrikandi2000
    @TheSrikandi2000 Před 9 lety

    Great Idea... i live at the beach, which one do you think is more efficient; using AC or the method you showed in the video for multiple tanks?

  • @PokemonNerd8749
    @PokemonNerd8749 Před 8 lety +1

    Awesome! I was thinking of how I could cool my axolotls and I have a mini fridge that size in the shed! Now I just need some hose!

    • @FuruyaHaKokoniImasu
      @FuruyaHaKokoniImasu Před 7 lety +1

      PokemonNerd8749 Did it worked? I am looking to do that for my axolotl to, thats why im asking! :)

  • @eozen81
    @eozen81 Před 9 lety +1

    Thanks Joey for this cool video but may I kindly ask how we can make the temp stable i.e. 22 C for the tank with this method?

    • @caffeinedinosaur
      @caffeinedinosaur Před 10 měsíci

      I’m 8 years late but you can get a temp controller for your aquarium that you plug the pump or the fridge into

  • @striker21ro
    @striker21ro Před 10 lety +1

    Hello joey...nice video. I read the comments and i just wanna add something. Someone asked u if u could fit more hose...would u do it? and u said yes the more the better. Well..ur ideea is brilliant but this could be improved by replacig the hose inside with half the lenght (or less) of some coiled copper pipe!!! U can do the same chiller with a smaller fridge and double if not even triple the efficiency. Heat transfer is 10 times better thru copper coil. And half of that lenght of copper pipe is a little bit more expensive but the results improve dramatically. I hope this helps...keep up the good work... keep inspiring. Peace!

    • @trevorpowell4851
      @trevorpowell4851 Před 10 lety +4

      Just replied to this on another comment. copper is poisonous to many forms of aquatic life. Especially Invertebrates, and some plants. You are better off using inert materials unless you are sure the copper will not effect what you have in the aquarium.

  • @salemguitarist92
    @salemguitarist92 Před 10 lety

    Thats an awesome idea. And if you use frozen food like i do for my fish you can still put it on the door or in the freezer part. and you can still use it for some food and drinks for your self

  • @jakeklingensmith4364
    @jakeklingensmith4364 Před 2 lety

    Hey thanks for making the video. I just set up my chiller. I attached it through my Fluval 306 canister filter. When it was all hooked up and running, it seriously reduced the flow through the filter. Is that expected? Does it matter which side of the canister (input or output) the chiller is on? Thanks!

  • @fitraramadhan2183
    @fitraramadhan2183 Před 8 lety

    GENIUS!

  • @ericschoenleber2533
    @ericschoenleber2533 Před 8 lety +2

    You'd probably get better heat energy transfer by submerging whatever tubing you use in water or even better, glycol. Also, the length of tubing isn't the kicker. The only thing that matters is whether your water going through it is at the temperature you want by the time it leaves the fridge, however much tubing that takes. I'd use as much as you can fit, though, since it will only add buffering capacity to your water chain. 100' of 1/2" ID hose adds about 4 gallons of water volume. I'd definitely also use the thermostat in the fridge to handle the temp control, because the fridge will last longer than if it's having the power removed from it mid-cycle. Even better is that the hose itself and possible water or glycol suspension, won't see as much of a temperature swing, I'd imagine. Seems wasteful to have to cool the hose again just to cool the water.

  • @yocampout
    @yocampout Před 10 lety

    y didn't I think of that? awesome again

  • @mancuniman
    @mancuniman Před 10 lety

    Living in the UK, cooling aquarium water is USUALLY the least of our worries! LOL! But what a bizarrely simple, cheap, GREAT idea! Worth development....

  • @popcornco.6783
    @popcornco.6783 Před 7 lety

    Hey Joey, if you have a canister filter can you change the water exiting from the filter from going back into the tank by hooking up the output hose into the chiller then back into the tank?

  • @anupampatel6283
    @anupampatel6283 Před 9 lety

    Thanks Joey, It is indeed a great solution rather than buying an expensive chiller. is there any other option exist because the refrigerator will take too much room. is it effective using cooling fan? if yes the how effective is it?

  • @kg2nc
    @kg2nc Před 10 lety +54

    Some of these cheap garden hoses are not safe for drinking water so I would use Drinking water safe and BPA free and CSA low lead content certified. Just a note.

    • @thomshere
      @thomshere Před 8 lety +1

      +Ruben I thought the same thing. You can even buy "RV" drinking water water hose at Walmart. I'm sure that the bigger plumbing supply houses have flexible drinking water approved hose as well. Whatever you buy you might want to see if It's safe for sea water (non-leaching) as well.

    • @jarodmorris611
      @jarodmorris611 Před 6 lety +1

      I wonder what kind of cooling you'd get by running straight copper lines. Would hold the cold in the mini fridge better than rubber garden hose. Should also transfer the heat/cool better too.

    • @Demolishionist
      @Demolishionist Před 6 lety +6

      Copper, even in low concentrations, can be very toxic to many aquatic lifeforms. Be careful what species of fish/invertebrates/plants etc. you have in the tank if you use copper pipes.

    • @ballsdeep994u
      @ballsdeep994u Před 5 lety +1

      @@Demolishionist most house's have copper water lines in the house from the water main. I don't think it leeches that much if any.

    • @Demolishionist
      @Demolishionist Před 5 lety +1

      @@ballsdeep994u It's been proven over the years that it does indeed leech enough copper to harm many invertebrates. Simply dropping a penny in the tank will do harm over time. This is why most anyone serious about reef tanks uses reverse osmosis and deionized filtered water instead of tap water. (Even humans with Wilson's disease can't drink water from copper pipes due to leeching copper into the water).

  • @earlharman2040
    @earlharman2040 Před 7 lety +33

    I did this however I placed a bucket of water in the fridge and laid the hose in the water. It helped keep the water more constant.

    • @79ninzombie
      @79ninzombie Před 7 lety +2

      Does it work well? How cold in a hot room would it lower too?

    • @clarenceg.7789
      @clarenceg.7789 Před 5 lety

      How may degres did you won?

    • @kamaljyotikashyap9846
      @kamaljyotikashyap9846 Před 3 lety

      Hey man. Can i use it for a 350 litre tank? Keep cold water channa and im tired of floating ice bottles

  • @ericgauthier5507
    @ericgauthier5507 Před 4 lety +1

    Seeing the finished product on a fish tank would have been useful. no idea how to link this up to my water filter. Any examples someone have made? thanks!! :)

  • @necrobestial
    @necrobestial Před 9 lety +2

    Great vid! How would you connect this to a sump? And what if i put my cannister filter right into the fridge instead of having all that hose? Would that work? Thx and keep making thins cheap and easy for us

  • @RoyalMajestyCreators
    @RoyalMajestyCreators Před 5 lety

    You just gave me an idea a 3 and 1 on how to create a coiled fan to cool a room.The only problem I would be facing is the condensation. Maybe transfer it it to the plants they wouldn't mined a little copper..The question I have how cold can the refrigerator get without the cover removed from the freezer department?

  • @JKLluch
    @JKLluch Před 10 lety

    Hey Joey, are they fish food you might be able to make which cures ICH? My fish seem to be eating a lot. I knew this was a good sign so I thought how bout take advantage of this?

  • @ScreamSheLovesMeNot
    @ScreamSheLovesMeNot Před 2 lety

    You could probably use a variable speed controlled on your pump and a inkbirds temp controlled for the fridge/freezer?

  • @bennycastillomorenomysmall2417

    Great job there on your fish tank

  • @rewop23us
    @rewop23us Před 9 lety

    NICE! I made one from a office water chiller. It's been unused for a bit though and "buried" in my closet. If you're interested let me know and ill show you the Frankenstein monster chiller. With the thermostat on MAX (lowest temp) this thing chilled the water to darn near ICE cold lol

  • @tomhannaby1581
    @tomhannaby1581 Před 10 lety

    Joey, love the idea genius! I would add that you could butcher the condensing unit from the mini fridge and coil up some copper pipe inside a bucket or reservoir and connect the copper pipe work to the condenser and integrate the capillary line that controls refrigerant flow through the now coiled up evaporator within the bucket. Then the water in the bucket would be tank water which would flow through...this bucket could also have your filer media and double up as a filter / chilled water tank!

    • @chandlerdavis952
      @chandlerdavis952 Před 10 lety

      only if your fish to float and not swim

    • @tomhannaby1581
      @tomhannaby1581 Před 10 lety

      ? What

    • @trevorpowell4851
      @trevorpowell4851 Před 10 lety +5

      Copper is poisonous to many forms of aquatic life that is why he said if you want your fish to float and not swim lol.

  • @anabarber4337
    @anabarber4337 Před 10 lety +1

    Thanks I just found this! I keep Axolotls (who like it in the mid to low 60's) and this is a great project. Right now I live in a ground floor apartment with brick flooring in a shady building so just keeping my axo tank on the brick floor is enough to cool it. I've been worried about the possibility of moving someplace that doesnt have this option so thanks!

    • @StevenRides
      @StevenRides Před 3 lety

      I have axolotls aswell, and am now looking into this idea for my 25gal as chillers are around $500-$600..

  • @NickMach007
    @NickMach007 Před 10 lety

    Good idea for a reasonably priced chiller

  • @0311montes0311
    @0311montes0311 Před 8 lety +2

    You are the DIY King bro 👍

  • @perovic96
    @perovic96 Před 2 lety

    I would add a smart thermostat and smart plug , then when in the app of whatever brand you’re using set automation to switch pulp on or off depending the temperature

  • @mattblank9302
    @mattblank9302 Před 5 lety

    I am thinking about doing this for my hydroponics system here in sharjah. I am not sure the refrigerator's compressor will last the heat outside as it gets well over 45 degrees Celsius or 113 Fahrenheit.

  • @dwightbrown3979
    @dwightbrown3979 Před 7 lety

    I have been think of using a freezer, never thought of a water hose, but your video got my attention. I am looking at cooling the water of on a bigger scale. Right looking at appriox 500 plus gallon on a fish tank. Once it goes through the filter system having go in a freezer (hoses) an then back in the tank. Any opinions for this?

  • @farabi0013
    @farabi0013 Před 10 lety

    impressive !

  • @autumnfinck8243
    @autumnfinck8243 Před 9 lety

    Joey,
    Ingenious idea. I am new to aquariums and am learning all I can in a short period of time. How does the hose system connect to your aquarium? Is it connected to the filter? Or? Feel free to direct somewhere else so I can understand the set up.
    My major concern is keeping the tank cool enough without having to run my AC all day, as the summer temps here are in the 100's.

    • @autumnfinck8243
      @autumnfinck8243 Před 9 lety

      And if anyone else wants to answer my question or help me out feel free! :)

  • @mfredricknew
    @mfredricknew Před 7 lety

    I tried the small fridge chiller for my 55 gal that is located in my garage. in the tank is a pleco and a koi. both will be moving into my aquaponics 1984 gal tank. for the meantime I am running into a temp prob. I did the floating ice but that cut own on the swimming area for the koi and was tedious to keep up with. temp is sitting at 82-86. this caused an algae bloom and that was a nightmare. I found that the fridge with 75 feet of marine hose just did not chill the water enough to cool the tank. since this was a learning experience for me as I will be needing a cooling system for the aquaponics which will be located outside in a greenhouse. my next consideration will be a chest freezer with much more hose. question here..... there might be room for another 25 foot hose in the mini fridge..do you think that this will increase the cooling affect? I do have a vid of the set up.. would you like to see? and please comment..

  • @REEMIKS
    @REEMIKS Před 10 lety

    Amazing

  • @nateadams8458
    @nateadams8458 Před 7 lety

    so i found a 2.7 cubic foot daewoo mini fridge i figured the it's alil bigger so i can fit more hose inside of it.. about how many degrees should the temp drop?

  • @lancebusch8346
    @lancebusch8346 Před 5 lety +4

    I agree this sounds like a great idea especially for those of us who live in hot climates, But this does nothing if it's not tried and tested. There's no results of a temperature change. I'm not going to buy anything no matter how cheap if there is no proof it works.

    • @rocki_bb
      @rocki_bb Před 4 lety

      Clips showing it in action would be helpful. I think it could be due better with a cooler, bottles of frozen water the tubing coils around, and filling the rest of the cooler with cold water. It would mean there's a wider variability in cooling and requires more hands on maintenance, but I think it would work better

  • @bizoot1
    @bizoot1 Před 7 lety

    hey, u say the garden hose is well insulated. does the cold air in the fridge even affect it? should't u use copper tubes?
    another question, how far did u manage to cool the tank using this?

  • @Rockfish37
    @Rockfish37 Před 2 měsíci

    Youre a goddamn genius joey.

  • @Noah_Boschh
    @Noah_Boschh Před rokem

    I’m trying to get this done today; I will need a mini fridge 2 things of garden hose; and a ball valve what else will I need what’s that other part on the water input side

  • @aonirnolaloth
    @aonirnolaloth Před 7 lety

    i'm planning to build something like this, but how much will it cool? in need an 85 gallon tank cooled to 60/65F year round, during summer it can get to 86F around here, would this be enough? iḿ planning to keep Tritutus dobrogicus (newts), and they'll flee the water around 68F and stop eating

  • @mumermento
    @mumermento Před 9 lety

    Would the Fluval 206 External Filter work with this idea?

  • @tommybainbridge6955
    @tommybainbridge6955 Před 8 lety

    Good idea, this got me thinking - can I just say you would be a lot better off using copper coil or similar rather than garden hose - yes its more expensive but the energy transfer would save you a lot on power in the long run. Yes, garden hose is a good insulator - but a good insulator is not good when you are trying to set up a 'heat exchanger' - essentially you are insulating the flowing water from the colder fridge. Better again, it should be possible to use the refrigerators compressor and condenser and buy a small plate and frame heat exchanger on Ebay and use that to cool the water.

  • @brandentrahey279
    @brandentrahey279 Před 7 lety

    would my magnum 350 canister provide enough flow in this setup?

  • @EnddyFishing
    @EnddyFishing Před 9 lety +1

    using a cold water dispenser also another solution

  • @namnnguyen8745
    @namnnguyen8745 Před 9 lety

    hi, i am thinking to build one like that. just want to know how many gallon can it chill

  • @shippo4ever101
    @shippo4ever101 Před 4 lety

    If I have a hang-on back filter, how would I hook this up? I have a 20 gallon tank.

  • @PazLeBon
    @PazLeBon Před 2 lety

    I feel that finally we can buy these chillers for couple hundred bucks/quid/euros/pounds nowadays. But certainly might be a good hack if you have a spare fridge-freezer for any reason