squirt in the turns wrote: if the cold side of the system is located in a fridge at serving temperature (8 degrees or so)?
Cheers!
Squirt, are you a Pom?
My serving temp is 0 - 1 deg.
In answer to your question,
Your system will be unique & take some time to tune to your needs, so I can only give you temps based on my systems performance which is:-
I struggle to hold Lager temps (12 deg) once the average daily temp gets over mid twenties, Lagers in winter are no problem.
Ale temps are no problem even in mid summer.
The fridge I use to chill my circulating water is not much chop either, hense I use my Engel fridge for beer & the other is mainly for running the brew box, cold conditioning full fermenters, yeast storage & brewing equipment.
Some sugestions,
Use a large qty, of water in your resevior, (mine is just the crisper filled with water, pump & return line submerged in it) this way you will not heat it up too quickly when the pump kicks in.
One thing Ivé considered trying is putting the resevior in the freezer & using Glycol (Antifreeze) as my medium.
The only worry is that the resevior will be higher than the brew box & if I get a leak on a hose it will drain it self into my brew box.
Definately install a heat exchanger in the box as soon as you can, along with a cowling & 12 V fan from a computer.
The plastic tube coils will not be very efficient at heat transfer (as I'm sure you are aware)
The heat exchanger can be any old radiator, car heater or Air con heat exchanger, even if they have a leak, just seal it up with some Silicon or Epoxy. The unit will not be under pressure as it was in it's former life & so will not require an expensive repair to hold water.
Your pool pump might be a bit of over kill, what is its flow rate??
I use cheap little submersible pond pumps like the one in the link, shop around, the local pumping place should be able to get you one for 20 Bucks.
Mine is rated at 500L/hr & will lift a 2m head (this is important)
http://www.rockaroundtheblock.com.au/pr ... 448&cID=83
They are only about 3 inches square/cubed.
Cheers, Mick.