will it work if its in the desert and the air is arid or can i put a solar panel that will move the fan but how big must the solar panel be to move it ??
@SimpleTekКүн бұрын
@@NMJ-zt6my that’s easy, just work out watts needed and appropriate battery energy storage for 24 hour use
@SimpleTekКүн бұрын
H
@johnking62522 күн бұрын
Afraid of what, it's history. History always hides something, that's the joy of exploring history! Hiding it or making it up is all part of History, hahahaha hahahaha, nut-job conspiracy theories are part of the game. Who killed King Tut? or who didn't kill ceaser? Hahahaha. 🌍✌️🌎
@AppleBag10003 күн бұрын
plan to spend at least 500 for a small machine plus fuel and plus machine delivery\pickup if you can get it delivered at all in your area
@SimpleTek3 күн бұрын
@@AppleBag1000 prices have gone up. But u deaths you don’t need to rent a new machine from a dealer, that’s just burning money
@adjeiwilliam41733 күн бұрын
Will this work at a place where ground temperature is 34 degrees Celsius
@SimpleTek3 күн бұрын
@@adjeiwilliam4173 it won’t cool below that without a heat pump
@alexeytigarev76453 күн бұрын
For heating the house, I think hot air can be used. That will be easier then setting up additional hot water system.
@SimpleTek3 күн бұрын
@@alexeytigarev7645 ok
@rchristie54013 күн бұрын
Ilmfao. Wow. nice try
@SimpleTek3 күн бұрын
@@rchristie5401 idiots always make me snicker
@johnwang99143 күн бұрын
One problem about the ground as a thermal sink is that ground does not flow hence the radiating surface must pass through all the ground needed throughout the day instead of a fan blowing air across the coils or a pump pumping water across the heat exchanger. Mind you, if you could drill into a shallow aquifer, you could pump the water up one well, across the condenser coils and back down another well far enough away that the water won't short cycle at least not without passing through an appropriate amount of ground, basically using the acquifer as the underground pipe. Unfortunately, ground water use reduction policies to reduce ground subsidence makes this difficult pass by regulators.
@SimpleTek3 күн бұрын
@@johnwang9914 heat moves through the ground, just slower than a liquid
@johnwang99143 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek Yes, it moves by conduction but a ground thermal will still charge through the day so you still need a larger radiating area hence burying so much pipe. Note that how slow heat moves through the ground is why the seasonal heat stored in bore wells with the Drake's Landing community of Okotoks, Alberta was able to store the summer heat for use during the winter (It's a pity that the development was built with custom components such that they have not been able to maintain the system and many homeowners are now reverting to natural gas furnaces after decades of the solar district heating providing over 90% of the energy for several decades). Yes heat flows through ground but slow enough that ground has and is used to store heat for months. Geothermal as a heat sink still requires a vast volume of the ground preferably at least six feet down but usually geothermal systems are much shallower.
@SimpleTek3 күн бұрын
@@johnwang9914 I have a video on that. You’re on the right track.
@thomascoleman63225 күн бұрын
Government needs to quit hiding the truth and quit discrediting scientists who discover it 🤔🙄🤡
@gwc37215 күн бұрын
Why not show the set up in your house? Are you going to pipe water to every room?
@SimpleTek5 күн бұрын
@@gwc3721 are you telling me how to make my videos?
@gwc37214 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek I'm asking you.
@SimpleTek4 күн бұрын
@@gwc3721 not piping water into every room, just front and back of the house
@colterthompson68466 күн бұрын
It seems expensive to repair if a line breaks. Right?
@SimpleTek6 күн бұрын
@@colterthompson6846 it would be. Unless your ground moves a lot, lines rarely break
@justdoityourself71347 күн бұрын
Whaaat?!!! This is awesome!
@SimpleTek7 күн бұрын
thank you for the kind words
@barakasense7 күн бұрын
what is the size of the strut and the anglefor this 2V?
@SimpleTek7 күн бұрын
@@barakasense I can’t remember what I had for breakfast yet alone a build from a few years ago I got my math from Domerama.com
@EFudd-lu6ji7 күн бұрын
Hi - this sounds like a perfect solution for a small, off grid cabin we have. Would anyone happen to have any plans I can use to get started? Thanks in advance!
@SimpleTek7 күн бұрын
@@EFudd-lu6ji plans???? What is the word “plans”?
@EFudd-lu6ji7 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek The components needed to build the system were mentioned. The fan, the tubing, the radiator, the pump, etc. What size pump is needed? Where does the pump go, where does the fan go? How is the tubing connected to the pump, radiator, etc? How is the return piped, and where does the return connect to? I'm not looking for detailed schematics, just an overall explantation of how the components are connected to each other?
@SimpleTek7 күн бұрын
@@EFudd-lu6ji Jesus I can’t remember what I had for breakfast yet alone something so long ago. Wish I could help but I’m one of those throw out the directions guys. My wife hates that about me
@EFudd-lu6ji7 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek Thanks for getting back to me. Perhaps another one of the viewers who have succesfully built something similar may be able to help me. Thanks for making the video.
@SimpleTek7 күн бұрын
@@EFudd-lu6ji cheers
@SacredHeart05208 күн бұрын
It would ve alot bettwr if you were more realistic about price . Like a eacavater . $300 ? Not even close. At least 500$ + if you use a reallt small one not including fuel and delivery . And normal peeps can just hop on and dig efficintly . So u will need 2 days to dig and backfill . So prob more like $1000 to $1500
@SimpleTek8 күн бұрын
@@SacredHeart0520 stop renting new excavators from dealers, find someone who rents older ones cheaper.
@dwindi04068 күн бұрын
We're 4.5 minutes into a 14 minute video. Can we get to the subject now?
@SimpleTek8 күн бұрын
@@dwindi0406 thank you for watching
@thegadphly32758 күн бұрын
The MAIN point is.... the planet was 4-5 degrees WARMER then. Medieval warm period. These places were not inhospitable. They were green and open water and attractive for colonization... Warmth of planet is NOT a bad thing. ICE and COLD are a bad thing for the human race.
@SimpleTek8 күн бұрын
@@thegadphly3275 agree on the warmer part
@DNL828 күн бұрын
I'm not sure if I would use windshield washer fluid because it's flammable
@SimpleTek8 күн бұрын
@@DNL82 really? It’s never combusted on my windshield
@DNL828 күн бұрын
@SimpleTek I think it's just a possibility in the right/wrong conditions. But the same with antifreeze, so I guess it doesn't really matter. So, I guess you have to hope for the best. Lol
@dom119498 күн бұрын
the rune stone in alexandria, mn is very good evidence. the guy who found it did not know the viking runes. the tree that wrapped its roots around the stone was older than the presence of the finder.
@SimpleTek8 күн бұрын
@@dom11949 well said
@AvenEngineer9 күн бұрын
How about putting a hose coil in a well if you have one? That water is pretty cold, and if you warm it up a few degrees, you reduce the energy consumed by your water heater.
@SimpleTek9 күн бұрын
@@AvenEngineer wells might actually work better but it’s usually a lot more expensive to dig straight down 200 feet then out 8 feet down
@brunodiben9 күн бұрын
Im thinking in building a cooler/heater peltier based system, I plan to locate it ouside of the greenhouse for disipating the heat when I want cold and viceversa, and lets say I want to cool my greenhouse, I circulate water between the cold side of the peltier and a water barrel located inside of my greenhouse ( probably more barrels as battery, connected or not, will see), also can circulate to some radiator/fan for air cooling. Let me know if you like the idea. It looks interesting since it can be easily powered by solar panels I have not calculated anything yet, just was my first idea when figured out that peltier exist and its basically a heat pump, so lets use as it is 😆 Thanks for your content
@SimpleTek9 күн бұрын
@@brunodiben I hope it works for you!!!
@bodytechnic10 күн бұрын
If space is limited, can a borehole work?
@SimpleTek10 күн бұрын
@@bodytechnic boreholes work great, it just usually costs a lot less to dig out than down
@ryanTDG10 күн бұрын
When i was growing up vikings in north america was speculation. Then we found evidence, then we have the etymology of some of the cities, then we have stories from native tribes.
@SimpleTek10 күн бұрын
@@ryanTDG I’m Icelandic, there are some oral sagas that support what I’m saying here with my people but oral sagas arnt accepted by modern archaeologists
@ryanTDG10 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek I don't blame them for saying they need more evidence, I blame the powers to be for not wanting to fund more research. Just like Gobleki Tepe and other "controversial" sites, there's much more evidence obviously laying in the open. If we wanted to find it, we could.
@SimpleTek10 күн бұрын
@@ryanTDG well said
@wkgurr11 күн бұрын
If you're using this system in cooling mode it will constantly dump heat into the ground. Won't the ground eventually warm up around the buried pipes and reduce the efficiency of your system? Or is the thermal conductivity of the ground so good that the heat you dump there will transfer away quickly?.Also since this is a closed loop system won't it need some kind of expansion vessel in line or are the changes in water volume taken up by the plastic piping?
@SimpleTek11 күн бұрын
@@wkgurr all depends on size of the system.
@wkgurr11 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek Thanks, but what do you mean whith "size of the system"? Are you saying that the larger the interface between tubing and earth is (the longer the tubing) the smaller the loss of efficiency will be? You mentioned 400 feet of tubing. Is this long enough to minimize that loss of efficiency? I do not have access to a digger (the place where I live has no road access) but I would have access to a 15'000 gallon underground water tank (cistern) Could this cistern act as a heat sink for a system like this? Thanks again.
@SimpleTek10 күн бұрын
@@wkgurr in most cases the ground has enough energy to keep the system working. The volume of ground is huge. It’s like pouring 10oz of hot water into a tank of 20 million gallons.
@gaberoyalll11 күн бұрын
do u think my landlord will say anything or can i dig at night ?
@SimpleTek11 күн бұрын
@@gaberoyalll it’s a property improvement!!!
@gaberoyalll11 күн бұрын
my downstairs neighbor has ac and runs it all the time, this has got me thinking !
@SimpleTek11 күн бұрын
@@gaberoyalll :)
@zackbarkley759311 күн бұрын
Its really sad such a cheap source of energy exists under our feet. A good system should cost 2-3k and excavation should be government subsidized or have public services that perform it to cut the cost. Huge waste.
@SimpleTek11 күн бұрын
@@zackbarkley7593 well said
@Beaster45611 күн бұрын
I have been imagining some system like this and trying to find some info on something, finally stumbled upon youe video! Would there be any difference in doing this on a regular heat pump?
@SimpleTek11 күн бұрын
@@Beaster456 it’s possible I think
@Beaster45611 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek do you have many resources on designing such a system? Like how big does the insulated box need to be, how big pipe needs to be, how long etc?
@SimpleTek11 күн бұрын
@@Beaster456 sorry, no
@techspai763312 күн бұрын
I think your conspiracy theories are related to many other other conspiracies. More research is needed.
@SimpleTek11 күн бұрын
@@techspai7633 isn’t that the point? Duuuu
@shadowbeast356812 күн бұрын
Strange English. Russians use two words. "Accumulator" is an energy storage device and "battery" is a device consisting of several cells.
@SimpleTek11 күн бұрын
@@shadowbeast3568 the language hasn’t caught up with the technology
@ronaldwinfield30712 күн бұрын
Sometimes conspiracy theories turn out to be true. Perhaps this is one of those cases.
@SimpleTek9 күн бұрын
well said
@ronaldwinfield30712 күн бұрын
There has to be a reason for discovery of these sights. The fact that Vikings settled Halifax island does not in any way disprove your theory.
@SimpleTek9 күн бұрын
thank you
@ronaldwinfield30712 күн бұрын
Another point is to get from Lake Ontario to Lake Erie would be a nightmare as they would have to negotiate the Niagara river.
@SimpleTek12 күн бұрын
@@ronaldwinfield307 somewhat, Vikings navigate wild rivers all the time. It’s much harder with 15+ hostile tribes shooting arrows at you
@charliebrady37518 күн бұрын
It's called a portage. Or something else in Old Norse, since Vikings didn't speak French.
@ronaldwinfield3076 күн бұрын
@@charliebrady3751 It would still be a very difficult task.
@jeremybowman712612 күн бұрын
There are runestones in heavner, oklahoma
@SimpleTek12 күн бұрын
@@jeremybowman7126 ok
@chasjacks937813 күн бұрын
Man this guys talks a lot without sayi ng anything.
@SimpleTek13 күн бұрын
@@chasjacks9378 man, this guy bitches and whines like a 14 year old hot girl excluding her fat friend from a birthday party
@SophiaAphrodite13 күн бұрын
I would be curious if you could stack the line for small spaces to get the same effect. Dig a little deeper and run 2 or 3 gapped layers?
@SimpleTek13 күн бұрын
@@SophiaAphrodite possibly, lots of variables
@Iz0pen13 күн бұрын
You tube is now suggesting videos where they tell me to like & subscribe for five minutes straight 🤦♂️
@SimpleTek9 күн бұрын
I try to keep that to 30 seconds or less
@Iz0pen9 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek no worries great channel👍 subbed
@SimpleTek9 күн бұрын
@@Iz0pen thank you!
@poopywelder13 күн бұрын
Is 1 acre enough to do this ?
@joshuasims735714 күн бұрын
like to see the installation video
@michaelboyce387114 күн бұрын
You didn't mention hydrogen
@SimpleTek14 күн бұрын
@@michaelboyce3871 touché
@davehuber694916 күн бұрын
I live in northern Mn I have worked on geothermal units I have seen the loop coming back at 20 degrees are lower in February is would you be better of with electric boiler are electric heater at that point
@SimpleTek16 күн бұрын
@@davehuber6949 for heating in your climate it’s smart to inject heat into the ground around the tubes with evacuated tubes.
@kennardjohnson787516 күн бұрын
The vikings would have come down the east coast and they probably made it south of New Jersey, I would think they probably would have explored to Florida.
@SimpleTek16 күн бұрын
@@kennardjohnson7875 why would they have not explored Hudson Bay?
@kennardjohnson787516 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek I'm sure they did and sounds 100% plausible, I would think they traveled much farther than anyone would give them credit for.
@SimpleTek16 күн бұрын
@@kennardjohnson7875 well said
@headshot99216 күн бұрын
What a terrible way to present something. Could have been 5 minutes if you chose not to repeat it three times over and you managed to avoid going into any detail regarding hooking it all up.
@SimpleTek16 күн бұрын
@@headshot992 what a horrible person you are.
@headshot99216 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek How will you ever recover?
@SimpleTek16 күн бұрын
@@headshot992 1.4 million views, I dunno, who’s the idiot?
@headshot99216 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek the one arguing with a stranger. Sorry my commentary about you poorly presenting incomplete info has hurt you so deeply. Thank goodness you can wipe your tears with your 1.4m views.
@SimpleTek16 күн бұрын
@@headshot992 I’m crying soo hard all the way to the bank.
@axelrodaxel16 күн бұрын
I don’t know how far into North America the Vikings went, but I do believe the Viking had the balls to try to go anywhere.
@SimpleTek16 күн бұрын
@@axelrodaxel yep
@MosquitoCreek-gv4go16 күн бұрын
This is really exciting!
@SimpleTek16 күн бұрын
@@MosquitoCreek-gv4go :)
@PrinceCezar2717 күн бұрын
So there is a conspiracy to cover up viking presence is America because of.....land claims? Even if it WERE proven they were here and established, there would be absolutely NO CHANCE of any scandanavian receiving ANY land in North America. Ever lol.
@SimpleTek9 күн бұрын
I never said the claims were with the Norse, watch the video, it would be with the Dorset and the Inuit as the Dorset are Aboriginal and have ancestry in many northern areas going back centuries before the Inuit who have the current land claims.
@patrickdolan.17 күн бұрын
I heat my greenhouse with compost in the winter. Works great
@SimpleTek17 күн бұрын
@@patrickdolan. very viable heating method
@Ranchpig6717 күн бұрын
As an official electric company representative, I have flagged this video for immediate removal and notified the appropriate authorities. This is absolutely outrageous. Criminal even. Children could die if people were to try doing this. So much disinformation. All the experts and government officials I've spoken to recommend using only government APPROVED HVAC systems and this clearly is not. 1. Are you trained and certified to run heavy equipment? CHILDREN COULD DIE!!!! 2. Have you done the appropriate long term environmental impact studies? Children and endangered species could die!!! 3. Do you have the government approved permits? If not, children could definitely be harmed. 4. Do you have an engineering degree from a credentialed college or university? If not, you will definitely do something wrong and children could die. 5. Have you thought how lowering your energy costs could affect MILLIONS of utility company workers and their families? It's basically stealing food out of their children's mouths. They will die. So please for the love of Democracy and Diversity, do NOT think about doing this or any other project that might kill our children. As one of the most beloved and wise politicians ever said, "It takes a village to raise a child, but just one extremist to kill them" HC
@SimpleTek9 күн бұрын
That made my day! Children piss me off
@pierrelabelle355117 күн бұрын
Rather than ‘thermal battery’ can I suggest ‘thermal accumulator’ because ‘battery’ is really a chemical device, just a suggestion
@SimpleTek17 күн бұрын
@@pierrelabelle3551 technically you’re correct. Lock me up and throw away the key on my definitional infraction
@pierrelabelle355114 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTek No, I don’t want look you up, I like the information you bring and the way it is explained. I know the level of energy required to produce such good videos. P.S. If I made some mistakes, I apologised. English is not my first language, may be, it is why I am more concerned by the definitions, to have a better understanding of the subject…. 😎
@SimpleTek14 күн бұрын
@@pierrelabelle3551 cheers from manitoba, Canada. (I’m a Viking and we tend to go off without warning or reason)
@kimepp221617 күн бұрын
Which department is suppressing this information? The tundra west of Hudson Bay is desolate and has few obvious resources. The insects are ferocious. There are no forests. The land is a boulder garden swamp because of permafrost. Vikings might have visited this area but there is nothing for them but whales, fish, and seals. The area is blocked by ice from the end of October to June.
@danielcraft372714 күн бұрын
A 1,000 years ago? Times change.
@SimpleTek9 күн бұрын
Excuse me, How is that ANY different than Iceland or Greenland or any of the Norse countries in Europe?
@charliebrady37518 күн бұрын
@@SimpleTekThe Gulf Stream. Are you claiming there are no forests in Scandinavia?