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When a typical refrigeration unit is cycling on about eight times every hour and holding temperature, contractors are a pretty happy lot. But what if the same unit only cycles on every two hours or so and still holds temperature? That could well mean low energy usage and much longer equipment life, meaning lower initial and long-term costs.
Mike Reihl, president of Reihl-Efficient LLC, thinks he has come up with a better mousetrap. His tweaking of an evaporator coil has been studied by Mid-Michigan Community College’s HVACR program to verify performance data.
“I was just looking at more efficient ways to do refrigeration,” said Reihl, who is working on the project in his spare time while working for a mason contractor. “I looked at a lot of potential ideas and played around on the Internet.” The effort took four years from the inception of Reihl’s first idea to developing the current prototype.
By: Ref Dr.
Posted: January 19, 2009 11:46 AM
By: John
Posted: January 19, 2009 12:01 PM
By: Ref Dr.
Posted: January 19, 2009 3:21 PM
By: Matt
Posted: January 19, 2009 8:00 PM
To Ref Dr.'s note if the California Energy Commission would hear about this, the manufacture that use's this would and could get a huge amount of the California market and that should trickle down to the rest of the U.S.
Matt
By: Wayne
Posted: February 18, 2009 11:12 AM