Vance,
I agree, That's a great article. Not
only a good design but I tip my hat to the guy for all his effort in documenting
it as he did. There's more work in the article then building the
thing.
I want to build one also but my first thought is,
it might have to be modified to work with fan pressure. Do you have a
feel for how easy it would be to push air through the "Sorb" material with a
fan? Do you think that constructing
it as he did will allow the pressure created by a fan to move sufficient air
through it?
It could be easily altered by increasing the
outside diameter and also the inner screen diameter and thin out the wall of
"Sorb" the fan would have to push air through.
It's something I've wanted to add to my sub for a
while, but just haven't done. It's time I did.
Building it would be easy but I don't know much
about the "Srob" stuff that goes in it.
Dan H.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, March 16, 2009 6:46
AM
Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] heated
sub
Alan,
I got on too, finally, and you're
right. Great article, Nomdae. I'll be having one of those in my K350, thank
you. Let me see, where did I put that chunk of one inch
PVC?
Vance
-----Original Message----- From: ALAN JAMES
<alanjames@xtra.co.nz> To:
personal_submersibles@psubs.org Sent:
Sun, 15 Mar 2009 4:38 pm Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] heated sub
Nomdae,
That's a great article on making a scrubber. I got
through on the link 1st shot.
It's the type of article we should be borrowing and
putting permanently on the psub sight.
Can we do that Jon?
Alan
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, March 16, 2009 1:43
AM
Subject: RE: [PSUBS-MAILIST] heated
sub
Hey Frank:
I posted this link a few months ago, but
I'll post it again because it sounds like this is what you're
planning:
http://www.rebreatherworld.com/megalodon-rebreather-articles/7286-homebuilt-meg-radial-scrubber.html
It's
a homebuilt CO2 scrubber. I'm wondering if someone could also fill it with
"Damp Rid", or some other kind of desiccant, to help control moisture. It
would be interesting to have a system that passed cabin-air through the
drying canister, then through the CO2 scrubber, then injected O2 before
blowing it over the viewports to keep them clear.
As for my
heating/cooling needs, I'm not going to worry about it. My sub will be
a dark color (brown), and I'll be running it in water that'll be about 72
degrees average. If, after a few dives, I find myself sweltering or
shivering, I'll think up something to fix the problem.
From: ShellyDalg@aol.com Date:
Sun, 15 Mar 2009 00:16:33 -0400 Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] heated
sub To: personal_submersibles@psubs.org
Hi Dean. Ya, I'll need the heaters when I come up to play "you sunk my
battleship" with you.
Lake Superior IS cold. I grew up on Lake Ontario and I remember when
we'd get ice flows coming off the lake. It would pile up 20 feet or better
on the beach. Fun for kids playing in the ice caves and stuff. Scary when I
think how stupid we were, but hey, it was lots of fun.
For heaters....well, that's a tough one. I'm very miserly with my
electrical usage. I've been leaning toward a chemical solution rather than
some kind of electrical resistance heater. My thought was that it'll be
necessary to change out the air scrubber chemicals anyway, and a canister
type thing with the scrubber chemical and another with a heater canister
should be able to be incorporated into a "quick change" chamber with a small
12 volt fan. The outlet would blow clean, dry, warm air over the windows to
ventilate the sub. The device will need a small condensate reservoir or
trap, which would need emptying after a dive, and of course replacement
of the scrubber canister and heater canister.
The trick is to make the canisters reuseable so you could carry a
couple of sets, and just change the raw chemicals in the spares each day.
Self heating chemicals are easy to get, and a finned two chamber canister,
where the air flows over the fins, should be fairly easy to make. Pack the
stuff in there, shake it up, put it into the fan unit, and warm air
comes out.
My buddy has a little can thing he puts in his pocket when we ride on
cold nights. He puts his hand in there and it warms right up. Good for about
three hours. Seems like a larger unit with a fan could do the same thing.
Haven't got that far yet, but I'm thinkin.......
Frank D.
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