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 »  Home  »  gadgets  »  Portable air conditioner review
Portable air conditioner review
By Green Living Tips | Published  09/15/2009 | gadgets , energy
Portable evaporative air conditioner - MightyKool

One of the big challenges of off grid living in a hot area is cooling - both food and yourself. It's not just a matter of being water and energy efficient for the sake of the environment, but often due to the limitations of resources available.

While I've been able to tackle the food cooling issues to a degree with an electricity-free Zeer pot; last summer, Niki the Wonder Dog and I learned that air conditioning sometimes isn't a luxury, but a real necessity. 

I usually love the heat, but when native animals adapted to living in dry, hot conditions start started dying from heat stress; even with water available to them, that's when I realised I might be in trouble. 

We got through the worst days last summer using a few old techniques for keeping cool indoors, but only just and it was terribly uncomfortable at times. One day it reached 48C (118F) inside and there were many days of 40C+ (104F+).

Given I only have a small mobile solar power rig (single 130 watt panel) to run my notebook 12 hours+ a day and some lighting; I don't exactly have a lot of capacity to spare for power assisted cooling. Refrigerated air conditioning was definitely out of the question and even evaporative air conditioners are mostly rated at 150 watts +. 

I started to design a small personal evaporative air conditioner; but I'm no designer. Even in my head, it looked like something out of the Flintstones. 

I searched for solutions around the world off and on for months and found nothing that was compact, light on electricity and water consumption. Then I came across MightyKool, a product from USA company Swampy Cooling Systems who have been making 12 volt portable cooling systems since 1989. 

What follows is going to sound like an ad for the MightyKool, but I assure you I'm receiving nothing for this review and I paid full price for my unit. It's just that I'm so impressed with the Mighty Kool as it does *exactly* what I need it to and I can see it being very useful to not only folks living off grid, but for use on camping trips as well.

Here's what it looks like:

MightyKool personal evaporative air conditioner 

It's small, but very powerful; able to crank out over 200 cubic feet of air per minute. 

The first thing I want to mention, and this is very important, is that this particular unit will not cool an entire room. It is designed to be a personal cooler, making the immediate area around you more comfortable, nothing else... but it does that incredibly well. Also bear in mind that this is an evaporative air conditioner, so it's not really much use in very humid areas.

The two vents can be moved to direct cool air in different directions and there's hosing you can also add to give it more reach. 

This unit holds nearly two litres of water, enough for a couple of hours and you can attach a larger water bag to it for longer periods between refills.

I bought it a couple of months ago during our winter, so it hadn't seen any use. Last weekend, summer paid a an early visit. It wasn't anything like the searing temperatures of last summer, but at 37C (98.6F) inside, it was a good opportunity to give it a test run. Here's the results; set at its least powerful setting:

Ambient temperature: 37C (98.6F)
Humidity: 11%
Temperature of air at vent: 20C (68F)
Temperature 3 feet away (air from single vent): 24C (75F)

That's pretty amazing. Of course, the further away you're sitting from the vents, the higher the temperature, but placed on a desk around 3 feet away from me, I was still very comfortable. The second vent I had directed at Niki the Wonder Dog's bed about 5 feet away, and she looked pretty comfy too.

Swampy Cooling Systems have a variety of models. The one pictured above is the MW1, a 12 volt model (110 volt adaptor available). At its least powerful setting, it draws just .8 amps (11.3 watts), which by air conditioner standards is nothing. It's about the same as a small 12 volt desk fan. As mentioned, it only uses just over a litre of water an hour; so it's great in situations where water supply is limited. 

The MightyKool MW1 is powered by twin brushless double ball bearing motors that should last at least 20,000 hours. I was very pleased to discover it's even quieter than the desk fan I had previously. 

The MW1 is very light, just over a kilo (under 3 pounds). It's a simple unit, but well constructed. The special cooling pads are said to last around two to four hundred hours - and they are cheap to replace.

The Mighty Kool isn't cheap, but what it does, it does very, very, very well. I haven't seen anything else on the market yet that comes even close to what this little powerhouse can do.

The other thing that impressed me about Swampy Cooling Systems was their level of customer service. I communicated mainly with Jack, the owner of the company and he was very attentive. Shipping it over from the USA with a few accessories was a worry as I was concerned about damage, but I think the MightyKool folks must be expert Tetris players too - I've never seen a box so well packed. 

Thanks to MightyKool, I'm not dreading the coming summer. When it starts getting *really* hot again, I'll update this review with more performance results.


 
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Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
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Comments
  • Comment #1 (Posted by Richard)

    I'm really glad to see that someone is manufacturing this low tech but effective method of cooling. It's not a new concept as I abandoned one still very good one (1940's/1950's vintage) when I moved back to the USA from Mexico in 1990. I had bought it at a flea market in California in the mid '80's for 5 dollars. It was about 35cm square and 60cm tall made of enameled steel. It was very art/deco with its rounded corners and stamped vents on the sides and back. The fan/pump mechanism was a single ac motor that had a fan on the front and an open gear on the back that drove a centrifugal pump in the bottom which was the water reservoir. It held about 2 liters of water as I recall. I replaced the calcified pads with cut down pads made for a larger unit. It was effective at personal cooling even when the humidity was up.
    I ran it on 120v AC but it was such a straight forward mechanical construction that I could easily have replaced the motor with a 12 or 24 volt DC motor but in Mexico I had cheap plentiful electrics so I went for brute force.
    The southwestern United States is cooled by evaporation cooling even the very large stores.
    A few years earlier I had a van that I used in Las Vegas and In Southern California that had a roof top, very low profile evap cooler that ran off the battery. It had a small on demand type pump that dripped water on to a spinning disk that broke it into tiny droplets and flung it into the airstream from the fan driven by the same motor that drove the disk. Very effective even in the Los Angeles area were I did some stealth camping on city and residential street. It would get too cool at night and I would often have to turn it off. I never ran the battery down even with overnight use.
    www.oldfool.org
     
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