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Home Energy Magazine Online May/June 1996
Installing and Maintaining Evaporative Coolers
by Roy Otterbein
Roy Otterbein is president of Otterbein Engineering
in Phoenix, Arizona. He holds three patents in indirect evaporative cooling
and is a member of the ASHRAE Standards Committees on direct and indirect
evaporative coolers.
| As warm weather comes upon us, many people
in the western United States will be starting up or replacing evaporative
coolers, or buying them for the first time. Proper installation and maintenance
of these systems is very important, and recent improvements in the technology
change how to best handle these tasks. |
 |
Evaporative coolers cost
only one-tenth to one-fourth as much to operate as refrigeration air conditioning
and are much cheaper to buy ($400-$800). This makes them an excellent option,
particularly in hot, dry areas of the country.
An evaporative cooler is a simple device consisting
of a fan and a water-wetted pad. A small pump recirculates water from a
sump (which is part of the cooler cabinet) to keep the pad wet. The fan
draws outside air through the wet pad, making the air more humid but colder.
This air is blown into the house, forcing the warmer air in the house to
be exhausted out open windows or through a vent into the attic (see Figure
1). This is quite different from refrigeration air conditioning, which
cools inside air and returns it to the house.
Although the use of outside air is one major
benefit of evaporative coolers, it also complicates their installation
and operation. The evaporative cooler must be installed outside the house,
ducted into the house, and freeze protected and isolated from the house
during the winter months.

Figure 1. Evaporative coolers bring outside air into
a house and exhaust it through open windows or ceiling-mounted barometric
dampers.
Cooler Performance
Evaporative coolers make air cold by forcing dry
air through a wet pad. The wet-bulb temperature (the temperature of air
leaving a 100% effective pad) is a function of the entering-air temperature
and relative humidity. In heat exchanger theory, evaporative cooler pads
are considered constant temperature heat exchangers, whose surface is at
the wet-bulb temperature of the air passing through them. How close it
gets to that temperature is called the saturation effectiveness of the
pad, which improves at lower air-flow rates. Most pads have a saturation
effectiveness of 60% to 90%.
Evaporative coolers are most popular in areas
with the coldest summer wet-bulb temperatures, which tend to be in the
western United States. Figure 2 shows 1% wet bulb isolines--the
wet bulb temperature that is exceeded only 1% of the time during the summer
months in a given area.

Figure 2. Wet bulb temperature isolines at the 1% level.
Summer wet bulb temperatures indicate where evaporative coolers will work
best. If an area has a 1% summer wet bulb temperature of 70°F or below,
an evaporative cooler should be able to provide most of a house's cooling
needs. However, they are still very popular in areas with wet bulbs between
70°F and 75°F.
A quick check for evaporative pad performance
is to compare the temperature of the water in the cooler sump (approximately
the wet-bulb temperature of outside air) to that of the air entering and
leaving the cooler (see Figure 3). The following equation
can be used:
Saturation effectiveness = ( TOSA-TLA)/(
TOSA
-TSUMP ) x 100
where
TOSA = Temperature of outside air entering cooler
TLA = Temperature of air leaving pad (air inside
cooler)
TSUMP = Temperature of sump water

Figure 3. The saturation effectiveness of evaporative
cooler pads can be checked with a thermometer. In this example, a cooler
has 70°F air leaving the pad during a 100°F day, and has a sump
water temperature of 60°F. Saturation effectiveness = (100-70) / (100-60)
x 100 = 75%.
An alternate way to determine pad performance
is to check the temperature of the air leaving the cooler against the cooler
index (see Table 1). The cooler index is the anticipated
temperature of the air leaving an aspen pad cooler (described below) and
accounts for heat added to the air by the pump and fan motors and a cabinet
exposed to the sun. The cooler index has the advantage of enabling the
homeowner to check cooler performance by watching the news and checking
the temperature of the air leaving the diffuser in the house. If this temperature
is 3°F or more higher than the cooler index indicates as normal, the
cooler is not operating as well as it should be, probably due to a malfunctioning
water distribution system, sagging pads, or poorly manufactured aspen pads.

Table 1. Evaporative cooler index for standard aspen-pad
coolers. Enter the table from the left with outside air temperature and
the top with outdoor humidity. Where the row and column meet is the temperature
of air a typical evaporative cooler will produce. The cooler index can
also be used to check the performance of cooler pads.
Homeowners can also use the cooler index to decide
when to switch between evaporative cooling and air conditioning. As a general
rule, if a cooler produces air colder than 70°F, it will create a comfortable
environment; if it produces air hotter than 75°F, it will not. Between
70°F and 75°F is a gray range in which some people are comfortable
and some are not.
Evaporative Cooler Types
There are two main categories of evaporative cooler:
single-stage and two-stage. Single-stage or direct evaporative coolers
are by far the most common and are categorized primarily by pad style.
Fiber Pad Coolers
The most common pads are shredded aspen wood fibers
packed in a plastic net. This material (also known as excelsior) was once
widely used to ship delicate items like glassware. There are a number of
synthetic-fiber pads; however, few perform as well as high-quality aspen
pads, which have a naturally wettable surface. These pads are 1 to 2 inches
thick. Quality and cost vary substantially; the least expensive pads are
usually the thinnest. If thin pads are used, each pad frame should be double-packed,
using two pads to improve saturation effectiveness.
Fiber pads must operate at low air velocities
to prevent water from being pulled off the pad by the airstream. They are
therefore used on coolers that have air inlets on many sides. The pads
are simply discarded every year or two and replaced with new ones. Fiber
pad coolers usually cost the least and require the most maintenance.
Rigid-Sheet Pad Coolers
The other main type of cooler uses a rigid-sheet
pad--a stack of corrugated sheet material that allows air to move through
at higher velocities than is possible with aspen pads. These pads are usually
8 or 12 inches thick. Twenty years ago they were found only in large expensive
commercial coolers, but they are now common in residential coolers as well.
Coolers using rigid-sheet pads usually have a
single air inlet (and are often referred to as "single-inlet coolers").
The pads have a corrugation pattern that forces water to flood the pad's
air inlet side where most of the evaporation of water (and scaling) occurs
(see Figure 4). These pads are substantially more expensive than aspen
pads, but they can last for many years if water quality is properly maintained
with a bleed-off or sump dump system (discussed below). Therefore the life
cycle cost for these pads can equal the cost of aspen pads (not to mention
the labor savings from not having to change the pads every year or two).

Figure 4. A rigid sheet pad has alternating corrugated
layers at 45° and 15° angles. The front (air-inlet face) of the
pad is at the left on the diagram and is where most of the water evaporation
and air filtration occurs. Water shoots upward from the water inlet pipe
and is distributed by the water distribution cap. Although the air flow
tends to push the water toward the back of the pad, the 45°/15°
corrugation pattern forces the water to flow predominantly to the air-inlet
face.
|
Two-Stage Coolers
Two-stage (also called indirect/ direct) evaporative
coolers usually use a rigid pad and have an indirect evaporative "precooler."
The indirect coolers precool the air without adding humidity to the air
going into the house. To understand this concept, imagine blowing air through
the core of a pipe. Then sprinkle water on the outside of the pipe, and
blow air across the pipe. The air inside the pipe is cooled by contact
with the cool pipe, but it is not in contact with the water, so its humidity
does not increase. Since this precooling adds no humidity to the air, it
can still be subsequently direct-evaporatively cooled. However, because
the precooled air cannot hold as much moisture, the result is both colder
and drier air.
A rather startling feature of two-stage evaporative
coolers is that they can produce air colder than outside wetbulb. Two-stage
coolers are the highest priced and best-performing evaporative coolers.
They are at their best during extremely hot (110°F-plus), dry days.
Cooler Maintenance
Rigid pads should be washed down every fall at winterization,
when the scale on the pad is still soft and can be removed with the least
damage to the pad. Aspen pad coolers, on the other hand, should have major
maintenance in spring, when the pads should be replaced. (See "Maintenance
Guidelines" for both cooler types.)
Since evaporative cooler pads are designed to
provide wet-surface contact with all the air moving through them, they
are also remarkably good air filters (hence the term "air washer" or "scrubber").
Many rigid-sheet pads can filter out 90% of particles 10 microns (µ)
and larger, including most pollens and dust. Fewer data are available on
aspen pad filtration; however, in my personal experience, these pads also
perform well as filters.
Maintaining Water Quality
As the water in an evaporative cooler evaporates,
fresh water (makeup water) is brought into the cooler. A float valve controls
delivery. However, the minerals (salts) brought into the cooler with the
makeup water do not evaporate, and the water in the sump becomes brackish.
Eventually the water becomes saturated with minerals and the minerals precipitate
out (usually at the air inlet side of the pad). During operation, most
of the water evaporation and filtration occur at the air inlet side, leaving
a combination of scale and previously airborne dirt on that surface. When
a pad has failed, the inlet face is usually clogged while the downstream
face can appear brand new. A trick to lengthen the life of rigid sheet
pads is to rotate and turn the pad upside down, so that the previously
downstream face becomes the upstream face.
To prevent the water from becoming saturated
with minerals, a bleed-off or sump dump system should be installed.
A bleed-off system is simply a tee installed
in the water distribution discharge, with a hose to a nearby drain or to
the ground. Whenever the pump turns on, a small amount of the water is
diverted.
A sump dump system (referred to as a "blow-down"
in cooling tower jargon) evacuates the water from the sump every six hours
or so while the cooler is operating. The dumping is done by a second pump
(most commonly) or by a power-activated sump drain valve.
Sump dump systems are better than bleed-off systems
because they discharge not only brackish water but also some of the enormous
amount of filtered dirt that collects on the bottom of the sump. Some coolers
have sloped bottoms so that minerals and dirt will gravitate toward the
sump dump.
A water treatment system is a good idea for fiber
pad coolers. Often it enables the user to keep a set of pads for two years.
For rigid-sheet coolers, a water treatment system is essential, because
rigid pads cost up to $100 to replace.
In reality, it is rare for water in a cooler
not to become saturated with minerals in most desert environments. Hard
water is very common in areas where evaporative cooling is used, and maintaining
ideal water conditions in a cooler would consume too much water. Bleed-off
systems can use as much as 5 gallons of water per hour, but if water is
particularly expensive in the area, even 1 gallon of water discharge is
substantially better than trapping all the minerals in the cooler.
A technique to minimize the effects of water
waste from bleed-off and sump dump systems is to send the discarded water
to a consumer of potentially low-quality water. Sending this water to a
garden is ideal, because the cooler discharges more water when the weather
is hottest and the watering needs of the garden are greatest. (Mineral-sensitive
plants could be harmed, but I have watered a standard vegetable garden
with no trouble.) Someone should develop a system for using this water
to flush toilets.
Sizing Evaporative Coolers
Evaporative coolers generally provide warmer air
than refrigeration air conditioning and therefore must deliver more air
to do the same job. A basic rule for sizing evaporative coolers is to use
the largest cooler (within reason) that one can afford. A large evaporative
cooler with a big blower and a low-horsepower motor will perform better
than a small cooler with a high-horsepower motor. (This is different from
air conditioners, for which the most efficient unit is the smallest one.)
Evaporative coolers are assigned an Industry
Standard CFM by the manufacturer. This CFM (cubic feet per minute air flow),
which is usually a number between 2,000 and 6,500, is approximately 50%
higher than the highest air flow the cooler can actually produce with no
ductwork restriction. Although the Industry Standard CFM claims much more
air flow than a cooler can deliver, this approach to defining cooler sizes
has been used for years by many manufacturers and shocks only the novice
specifier. It is not unlike the technique used to define lumber sizes;
most people know that a 2 x 4 is actually smaller than 2 inches x 4 inches.
Most manufacturers also provide the actual air flow the cooler produces
at various duct resistances.
The ideal evaporative cooler installation is
an "engineered" system--a room-by-room heat load is calculated, a cooler
is selected, and a corresponding duct system is designed. In reality, this
is rarely done, because coolers are so inexpensive. Here's an alternate
way to size three basic systems common in residences.
A/C Add-On
An add-on evaporative cooler blowing into the refrigeration
cooling duct system is most common in low elevation desert areas that have
high cooling needs. It has a refrigeration cooling system and ductwork
sized to meet the needs of that system. The ductwork is smaller than the
ideal size for an evaporative cooler, but the system offers many advantages
over straight refrigeration air conditioning:
-
Overall cooling costs are reduced by using evaporative
cooling when feasible. (A rule of thumb is that overall cooling costs can
be cut in half without loss of human comfort. Rugged individuals can save
substantially more by using the evaporative cooler only.)
-
More outside air is introduced into the residence,
producing better indoor air quality.
-
The A/C compressor life is extended by eliminating
swing season A/C usage with its short compressor cycling.
-
A second cooling system is available if the main
system breaks down.
A guide for sizing the evaporative cooler for such
a system is to use 1000 CFM (Industry Standard) per ton of refrigeration.
Independent Ducted System
Another type is an evaporative cooler blowing into
a single diffuser in the hall ceiling or into a dedicated duct system in
the ceiling space. This is most common in areas with modest cooling needs
and in houses that have floor-based heating-duct systems entirely too small
for evaporative-cooling ductwork.
The sizing guide for these systems is to use 2-3 CFM (Industry Standard)
per ft2 of floor space in most climates. Use 3-4 CFM per ft2
in hot desert areas.
Window-Mounted Coolers
The third type is a window-mounted evaporative cooler.
This is a low-cost installation and is found wherever coolers are common.
These coolers should be sized in the same way as an independent ducted
system.
Blower Orientation
and Cooler Location
Most evaporative coolers are mounted on the roof
and have a blower that discharges out of the cooler bottom (called a down-discharge
cooler). Rooftop installations are usually the least expensive and represent
a reasonable compromise between first-cost and maintenance considerations.
However, problems with rooftop installations include
-
Roof deterioration, due to foot traffic and water
exposure from leaking coolers.
-
Slightly (about 1°F) warmer air produced by a sunlit cooler.
-
The nuisance of requiring a ladder for maintenance.
Fiber pad down-discharge coolers have four pad frames
(instead of the three pad frames of a side-discharge cooler), which produces
higher pad effectiveness. Rooftop installations can also use side-discharge
coolers. These require an additional sheet-metal elbow but can often be
located further below the roof ridge line than a down-discharge cooler
can be.
Other less common installations are
-
Side discharge through the wall to an interior duct. These installations
can often be difficult to maintain, because maintenance must be done while
standing on a ladder.
-
Ground mounted up discharge (or side discharge with
an upward elbow). These installations are the easiest to maintain and are
often naturally shaded. They are my personal favorite but be careful--dogs
can sometimes mistake the coolers for fire hydrants.
See "Installation Guidelines"
for tips to help ease maintenance and improve cooler performance.

Figure 5. Many evaporative coolers have adjustable-speed
belt-driven blower wheels which allow airflow to be changed.
Increasing Air Flow
Most evaporative coolers that are installed with
ducts have a belt drive system with an adjustable pulley (formally called
a "sheave") on the motor. This sheave has two bolts--one to secure the
sheave to the motor shaft and the other to allow the effective diameter
of the sheave to be changed. The motor-belt-blower system is similar to
a bicycle drive system: the larger the motor sheave is made, the faster
the blower wheel will rotate and the more air the cooler will deliver (see
Figure
5).
The motor will run at roughly the same speed
no matter what its work load. If it is overworked, it will draw excessive
current and overheat, and the thermal circuit breaker in the motor will
turn the motor off; as the motor cools down, it will automatically restart
and repeat this process. If this occurs, the effective diameter of the
motor sheave should probably be made smaller (although failed flex duct
or tight bearings could also be contributing to the problem).
By checking the motor current and readjusting
the sheave diameter and belt tension, the installer can maximize the cooler
air output. This is often not done. In fact, I have never visited a cooler
installation (except field test sites) in which the motor was putting out
its potential.
If a motor is being replaced, this might be a
good time to increase the horsepower, blower speed, and airflow. Whenever
blower speed is increased, it is important to make sure that the cooler
blower can withstand the new speed, that the increased air flow does not
cause water to be pulled into the blower, that the duct air noise is acceptable,
and that the circuit and wiring to the cooler are adequate for the increased
current draw. Although increasing motor speed can improve cooler performance,
the higher operating temperatures will decrease the life of the motor.
So increase the blower speed only if the cooler's performance is inadequate.
sidebar
Maintenance Guidelines
-
Always disconnect power to a cooler before maintaining
it.
-
Never use light oils for bearings. Use lubricants
recommended by the manufacturer or 30 SAE nondetergent. Light oils act
as solvents and wash out the heavier lubricant.
-
Use only listed (UL, UR, or ETL) pumps.
-
Frozen blower motors can sometimes be salvaged to
provide years more service. Sometimes a rap with a hammer can free up a
stuck motor.
-
Submersible pumps should have a float switch lockout.
These pumps can be ruined by running dry.
-
Some residential coolers use a thicker "B" belt
instead of an "A" belt. Carefully check the replacement belt (especially
for 3/4- and 1-horsepower coolers).
-
Do not use asphaltum sump liners on modern powder-painted
coolers. Powder paints are superior to liquid paints; manufacturers have
adopted them to meet EPA guidelines. The liner will not bond to these new
paints, and today's modern coolers last much longer than the older coolers
that were painted with solvent-based paint. Consult a cooler supply store
if a patching material is needed for a particular cooler.
-
As a simple check, use a 12-ounce soda pop can to
test the discharge rate through a bleed-off system. The can should fill
up in one minute at a flow rate of 5 gallons per hour.
-
A trick for removing debris from the sump of a flat-bottom
cooler is to use two wet towels to trap the debris and force it to the
drain.
-
If the performance of the cooler pad is in question,
check the leaving air temperature against the cooler index. If a cooler
is not providing cold air, the water distribution system is probably clogged,
or there may be a sparse area in an aspen pad. Be aware, however, that
weather conditions (temperature and relative humidity) may simply not permit
the cooler to provide air cold enough to satisfy the occupant.
-
The very prudent user will store the pump and blower
motor in the house during the winter. The nighttime radiation cooling of
a rooftop cooler leads to condensation inside the cooler, causing rust-seized
shafts. As a result, it is fairly common for a pump or blower motor to
fail at spring start-up.
-
Check the barometric damper blades. These devices
are notorious for sticking open, causing heated or air-conditioned air
to be lost to the outside.
Problems Not Covered in the Owner's Manuals
-
A thud when the blower starts. This is caused by
a loose motor sheave and/or a loose blower pulley.
-
Blower pulley continually falls off shaft. Use a
thread-locking compound on a clean bolt and pulley thread when reinstalling.
-
High-frequency humming noise. This usually occurs
only on rigid pad coolers at the float valve. A resonating float valve
can cause copper water lines to break. The solution is to provide additional
float valve support by securing the water line to the cooler.
sidebar
Installation Guidelines
-
Use a two-speed blower motor. About 60%-80% of the
time, a cooler operates in low speed, which is its more efficient mode
(low watts per CFM and higher saturation effectiveness).
-
Use a low-voltage thermostat. High-voltage thermostats
permit greater temperature swings, although they are better than no thermostat
at all. Manual control wastes energy and can make the house uncomfortably
cold at night. (Many people trade in their evaporative coolers for air
conditioners when all they really need is a $50 thermostat.)
-
In an add-on system, use a barometric damper at
the fan discharge of the evaporative cooler. These dampers make it much
easier to switch between heating/air conditioning and evaporative cooling.
While barometric dampers tend to leak air more than a standard slide-in
damper, the convenience of having a barometric damper tends to increase
the use of the evaporative cooling mode.
-
Check the float valve setting after one pump cycle.
The water held in a pad drains into the sump and can cause the sump to
overflow if the float is set too high.
-
Provide an easily accessible water shutoff for rooftop
installations. A leaking cooler should not require a ladder for an emergency
shutoff.
-
Use closed-eye hooks in chain-hung coolers. Inadvertently
lifting the cooler while removing the pad frame can cause an open-eye hook
to lift out of the chain and leave the cooler unsupported. (I have first-hand
experience of this!)
-
Following are installation guidelines required by
code. It is pretty rare for a cooler installation not to have some code
violation.
-
Provide an electrical disconnect near the cooler
to facilitate safe maintenance. This is particularly important for rooftop
installations, because lack of a disconnect encourages people to work on
live coolers. Higher quality units now come with a disconnect.
-
Provide a minimum of 3 ft of clearance to any side
of the cooler that requires access for maintenance. This is a code requirement
for sides with electrical parts.
-
Be sure the cooler inlet is 10 ft away from, or
3 ft below, plumbing vents, gas flues, clothes dryer vents, or bathroom,
kitchen, or laundry exhaust fan vents. The installer may find it easier
to relocate the troublesome vent than the cooler.
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