Austin Shackles : email ans"at"ddol-las.net. Snail mail on request
Just fermenting and being fermented by life
SKIP books, get 'em while they're hot!!! Skills to Inherit Property
Come join me at the 2023 SKIP event at Wheaton Labs
“Increase and multiply, and fill the earth, and gain dominion over it, and rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the heavens and all the livestock and all the earth and all the creeping things that creep upon the earth.”
Community Building 2.0: ask me about drL, the rotational-mob-grazing format for human interactions.
Anthony Dougherty wrote:
Here is my struggle, i am looking for a 100% self-sustainable build. which for me makes metals and plastics a no go. the biggest struggle has been trying to find an alternative water barrier.
Julie Reed wrote:
Anthony Dougherty wrote:
Here is my struggle, i am looking for a 100% self-sustainable build. which for me makes metals and plastics a no go. the biggest struggle has been trying to find an alternative water barrier.
I’m not sure there is anything in nature that is waterproof to make the envelope layer, except clay. And that might be a chore, to make a clay umbrella. But consider this- you really don’t need to keep the mass dry! Water holds heat better than anything, so a wet mass obviously holds much more heat (or ‘cool’). What you need to prevent is Migration. That means the wet needs to be the same ‘wet’ every day, not water that is moving through the mass (migration) robbing the heat. That may make your dilemma greater or less, I don’t know. It definitely gives you a major potential mold issue, depending on how the mass relates and connects to the dwelling. I say that because I sense you are talking about a home, not a greenhouse. But what you wouldn’t want is drainage, because that means water will enter your mass, have a quick fling with the heat there, and elope with it. The only way I can think that ‘might’ be acceptable is if you could somehow trap that water and return it to the mass. But in the process, some heat will be lost. Part of the answer also depends on your location, and just how much heat you need to store, and for how long. The other issue is insulation. Water conducts heat far better (and faster) than dry earth. So a wet mass needs better insulation on the exposed areas.
One last thought- you could, with enough slope to the mass, build a shake roof over it. That’s waterproof and natural.
“Increase and multiply, and fill the earth, and gain dominion over it, and rule over the fish of the sea and the birds of the heavens and all the livestock and all the earth and all the creeping things that creep upon the earth.”
Just fermenting and being fermented by life
Just fermenting and being fermented by life
Just fermenting and being fermented by life
Just fermenting and being fermented by life
Home: SW Colorado, 38N Latitude, 2100m elevation, Zone 5b/6a
Ask Me About: Keyline in Broadacre, Pasture restoration, Electric Vehicles, Solar, Computers/Networking/Automation
What if the "fog harp" was actually made of angled heat pipes stuck into the rear mass(?)
Just fermenting and being fermented by life
Home: SW Colorado, 38N Latitude, 2100m elevation, Zone 5b/6a
Ask Me About: Keyline in Broadacre, Pasture restoration, Electric Vehicles, Solar, Computers/Networking/Automation
Josiah Kobernik wrote:
What if the "fog harp" was actually made of angled heat pipes stuck into the rear mass(?)
David, I woke up thinking about heat pipes this morning. I was trying to figure out how heat pipes from the mass could cool the fog harp, but I think you nailed it by having the heat pipe itself be the condensing surface.
Anyone have design ideas for DIY heat pipes that are filled with non toxic material?
Earlier in the thread, Greg mentioned using water. Do you think that would suffice in this scenario?
Home: SW Colorado, 38N Latitude, 2100m elevation, Zone 5b/6a
Ask Me About: Keyline in Broadacre, Pasture restoration, Electric Vehicles, Solar, Computers/Networking/Automation
Hang a left on main. Then read this tiny ad:
Harvesting Rainwater for your Homestead in 9 Days or Less by Renee Dang
https://permies.com/wiki/206770/Harvesting-Rainwater-Homestead-Days-Renee
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