Solar-power air conditioner attracting interest
REDLANDS
April 16, 2007
12:02am
• Machine uses so little power it can run off solar panels
• Company says it’s seeing unexpected demand
Instead of letting the Central Valley’s blistering summer sun bake your home, the sun can actually cool it, says a Southern California Company.
SolCool One LLC of Redlands is marketing an air conditioner that uses so little power it can be run from the power generated by no more than four solar panels, the company says.
“This unit will operate without any power from the grid,” says Clifford Sutton, vice president of global marketing and sales for SolCool One. “Also, if there’s no power being brought to it al all, it will still operate for 24 hours on battery backup.”
Its efficiency is put at 30 SEER (Seasonal Energy Efficiency Rating) a government measurement. The federal standard for new air conditioning units is a minimum of 13 SEER. The higher the number the greater the energy savings.
But there is a trade off for that 30 SEER number.
The air conditioner is rated at 1.5 tons. A “ton” equals 12,000 BTU (British Thermal Units) of cooling per hour. As a rule of thumb, that would normally be enough to cool about 750 square feet of living space in a typically insulated home.
The air conditioner uses less than 400 watts of power, allowing it to run off the power of four or fewer solar panels or a wind turbine. It can also be plugged into a socket in your house and run off grid power, Mr. Sutton says.
The SolCool system uses all direct current (DC) circuitry rather than the ubiquitous alternating current (AC) systems used in the U.S., Mr. Sutton says.
“Edison was right and Westinghouse was wrong,” he says, referring to the battle between Thomas Edison, who championed a DC world, and George Westinghouse, who backed the winning horse, alternating current in the late 1800s.
“By using DC technology along with very proprietary technology … the SolCool Millennia version four is probably one of the best air conditioning units on the market,” he says.
(Listen to or download a CVBT Audio Interview with Mr. Sutton by clicking on the link below.)
The unit can also be used to provide heat, and with an optional gadget, can take the moisture that it sucks out of the air and purify it into drinking water.
Mr. Sutton says since word got out last month about the air conditioner, his company has been swamped with phone calls and e-mails from people wanting more information.
“The Web site is inundated. We are getting requests for information from every part of the globe,” he says. “The most unusual one was from the island of Yap.”
The units are being made in Israel. The first shipment of units for installation is not expected to arrive in the U.S. until late May or early June. Final retail pricing has not yet been set but Mr. Sutton says it’s expected to be under $5,000. That does not include the cost of solar panels, if the homeowner wants to go that route.