Yup. Something like these little guys would work perfectly.FIGJAM wrote:You could add some clips to those wires for quick connecting.

Yup. Something like these little guys would work perfectly.FIGJAM wrote:You could add some clips to those wires for quick connecting.

Wire size depends on the how much current you are carrying and how physically strong it needs to be. Loads in amps should be on the label. If the load is labeled in watts divide the watts by the minimum battery voltage to get amps.awesome, thanks guys... one last stupid question, does the wire have to be a certain minimum gauge?

FIGJAM wrote:Most of the trash containers that you would use for a cooler are made from a plastic that nothing will stick to.
Little angled brackets and screws will be needed to hold everything in place.
Use the silicone to seal the fan and registers to the container.
The first unicooler worked fine on low, but the intake register was too small to let the fan work on the higher speeds.
Make sure that the intake is twice the size of the fan. (20"x20" is about right)
Low speed for a tent that size is right on the borderline, so you may what the higher speeds for a quick cool down before depending on the low speed.


You had earlier said " get a fan that will replace the air inside the space every 3 to 5 minutes". In my case, that would easily be done with 15 to 25 CFM. Logic tells me that the slower the air moves through the filter pad, the more efficient the cooling would be.FIGJAM wrote:The more air you can move the better off you'll be.
. . .
If you have access to AC, get an AC fountain pump and a small AC fan.
Should be able to get the AC stuff cheaper than the DC.
They do have the best prices, but after too many instances of premature failure of a tool, I no longer shop there. After all, how much money did you save if it broke and you had to replace it. Especially if you are on the playa! I don't mind springing for better quality if it's for a critical application, like cooling my tent.Trishntek wrote: . . . pump from HF.
It's not a cube. I think you must have missed my first post on this. My bed tent is housewrap draped over a queen air mattress, roughly 5 x 7 feet = 35 sq feet. The housewrap wraps around the mattress on all 4 sides. It is supported by a bamboo crossbeam above the head end at about 3 ft high. It slopes down to nothing where it wraps around the foot end. A very rough guess estimates the average interior height is about 2 ft, hence 70 cu ft. Depending on how loose it drapes, that number may be considerably less. It's quite cozy, but I had to re-engineer it to have overlapping flaps on both sides so I could open it up to allow ventilation. After using this method for 8 years on the playa, I can assure you it works quite well considering it uses no cooling technology at all. I started with a smaller 3 man tent inside a cabin tent. I realized that carrying an entire extra tent was unnecessary because there is a perfectly good frame up there already. I've seen quite a few "tent within a tents" since then and like to think I invented the idea(in 2003). Maybe that's just hubris.asr9754 wrote:Sharpie, I think your math is missing something. Your earlier post says your sleeping enclosure is 75 cubic feet. Check that again; the cube-root of 75 is about 4', is your sleeping area really a 4x4x4 cube? That's about the size of a dishwasher. (Maybe you used the square feet instead of cubic feet? Or you were thinking cubic yards?).
Using the numbers from your example, if a 25 CFM replaces air every 5 minutes, that's 125 CF of air; cube-root of 125 is 5 feet, corresponding with a 5x5x5' structure. At the lower end of the spectrum, a 15 cfm Fan replacing air every 3 minutes = 45 cfm of air, corresponding with a 3.5' cube. I wouldn't want to sleep in that! Personally I trusted the 1000's of other posts and comments on this thread and followed Fig's design to the letter and was very pleased. My campmates' weaker/slower/lower-CFM fans performed noticeably poorer. (If you're sleeping in a puptent or 1-person mini-backpack tent, I will stand corrected!)
Got that. I was considering putting the bucket inside the cabin tent, which is generally cooler and less dusty than out in the open. Might be doable if there is adequate ventilation so humidity doesn't build up. But that takes up more space. I think putting it just outside the tent with a hole cut in the wall and a small shade over it and shade cloth around to lessen dust flow. This might have been discussed, but I think that a curtain of 1 or 2 layers of shade cloth will slow down the breeze and dust will drop out from gravity.asr9754 wrote: . . . You probably saw this already, but an enclosure w/ a swamp cooler needs an exhaust vent or gap as well

