Halloween - How I Hide My Fog Chiller

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Пікірлер: 15

  • @daShare
    @daShare6 жыл бұрын

    Looking good. I especially like the fog output through the dragon's head.

  • @paulhuwa1730
    @paulhuwa17303 жыл бұрын

    Easy to make fog juice using 1/3 Vegetable Glycerin and 2/3 Distilled water for thick fog. 1/4 Vegetable Glycerin to 3/4 Distilled water for less dense fog. Not to self, do Not put dry ice into fog chiller the day previous because it clogs the PVC pipes with frost causing the fog to back up and over heat/melt the PVC running from the fog machine to the cooler. Thanks for the video.

  • @OakLaneCemetery
    @OakLaneCemetery6 жыл бұрын

    I used a cube cooler for mine too. Just the right size to make a chiller for small foggers.

  • @hdymer
    @hdymer5 жыл бұрын

    Shea b Fonda-peters,,,, that’s a good one,, haven’t heard that yet

  • @yardhaunt2000
    @yardhaunt20006 жыл бұрын

    That's a great way to hide the chiller. the little gargoyle mouth is fun. fwiw I was the one who thought of using the coleman cube. death lord I think designed the cold fusion product. a bunch of us DIY' reverse engineered it for fun. If time is money it's cheaper to buy a real one. but people were using 100qt coolers with 1000W foggers or kitty litter pails. I was walking thru walmart and came across the coleman cubes. it might have been the first year they sold them not sure. I used 48 qt with a 400W fogger but used the 1/3 ice tray like the actual product. I use a 5 gallon bucket to a cauldron and the ghostofhalloween trash can design from atmosphere right now. I hide it behind a large tombstone and sometimes shoot it into the back of the tombstone. but I like this idea. happy haunting ^v^

  • @3370603
    @33706036 жыл бұрын

    What kind of lightning did / have u used with this ! Awesome ideal , looks great , I'm sure different types of lightning. Would be amazing!

  • @NostalgicTribe
    @NostalgicTribe6 жыл бұрын

    Hey nice idea. Been looking for a good design for halloween. I can't seem to find an answer anywhere but how long does dry ice last when used in water or for something like this? Like if you wanted to make a "witches brew look" and if I used the liquid you can buy for fog machines. How long does that last. I was going to make a fog screen for projections but no where does anyone say how long these things last. Or how often they need to be refilled.

  • @l0rdpj
    @l0rdpj5 жыл бұрын

    Awesome design! Been coming back to this video all year in prep for Halloween. Going to build one but wanted to ask about the front part. It looks like in the finished product there is a little bit of patch work of sorts with the gargoyle. Can you explain a little bit on what you did there, any tips to help? The gargoyle back had a pretty big opening so I imagine it took some tinkering to get it sealed and aimed correctly etc. so you didn't lose smoke etc. Next year I'm going to tackle your monster in a box, and use your advice the year after that to do some projection items. Thanks for all the great ideas!

  • @jco685

    @jco685

    5 жыл бұрын

    The back-side of the gargoyle was simply enlarged with a Dremel tool to a size large enough to accept the PVC output pipe, No sealant was used. The front of the "stone" had a square hole cut in it at ground level where the gargoyle emerged. The gaps between the gargoyle and stone were covered with duct tape a spray painted with the same stone-textured spray paint used for everything else.

  • @l0rdpj

    @l0rdpj

    5 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for reply sir. I just received the gargoyle in the mail and can now see that you made some adjustments to the backside of yours based on the way mine came delivered =) Thanks again, keep up the great work. Looking forward to seeing some more of your projects!

  • @hobsonservices
    @hobsonservices4 жыл бұрын

    Great design. How do you find the ice melting and coming out the exit hole? Mine will be inside and don’t want it all over the floor.

  • @jco685

    @jco685

    4 жыл бұрын

    There is some melting, of course, not a giant amount. I open the drain plug since mine is outdoors but, I don't know, maybe if you kept the plug closed it wouldn't melt enough to interfere with the operation of the chiller. Or you could put the cooler on a large baking sheet. Or just lay down a big towel next to the drain plug and change it for a fresh one every hour or two.

  • @jmax5105
    @jmax51055 жыл бұрын

    With this type of fog chiller, do you shoot the fog in to the tube so that it goes UP the tube and then settles down through the ice and then out the port, or is it the other way around, where you shoot it into the empty space and it goes up through the ice until it hits the tube and then down the tube and out? I need to make one of these this year. Nice work, that looks fantastic!

  • @jco685

    @jco685

    5 жыл бұрын

    Personally, I shoot the fog into the pipe with the elbow on it. Other people prefer shooting it into the short pipe and having it EXIT from the elbow pipe. As long as you get the build right, either way will work. Just try it both ways and see what gives you the best results.

  • @xenomenon

    @xenomenon

    Ай бұрын

    @@jco685 Great build and bonus points for imagination, artistry, and craftsmanship. The set up you have is the most efficient of the two options. You have thermodynamics working in your favor. The goal here is to cool the warm fog so that it lays lower than the air outside (warmer gases rise/cooler gases drop). When you cool the fog, it's naturally going to want to move down and out seeking equilibrium. To facilitates this, the exit port should be the lower of the two. Forcing it out of a higher port would be working against how gases behave. You want the fog to move through the ice and have an easy exit at the bottom of the cooler. 👍

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