I use home built water chillers for my condenser water.
Here is the small one; it will keep up with about 1500 - 1800 watts.
It was constructed from a commercial building control air drier, not exactly being run within design parameters, but the expansion valve is not of the thermostatic type and I am utilizing a "newer" refrigerant gas.
Here is the larger chiller, it is an 11,000 btu walk-in cooler/freezer condensing unit, fitted with a home made evaporator, tube-in-tube, about 20 feet.
It will keep up with the 4500 watt element.
If you do the math, you find that 11,000 = 3.2 kw. So how does an 11,000 btu chiller keep up with a 4.5 kw element? Refrigeration compressors are rated at an evaporator temperature, the "colder" the evaporator, the lower the rating. That, and a volume of water to buffer the temperature rise will allow the process to be run without overheating before it is finished. Of course, I don't run 4500 watts during the cuts.
My chilled water pump is a little small at about one gpm, but so far, so good. I try to keep my LWT about 45F with about 10F delta T across the condenser.
The water in the volume tank (styrofoam ice chest) will rise 5F or so on a hard strip.
Cooling Water
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Re: Cooling Water
that's a thing of hard beauty
it should work fine
you will be surprised at how hot water can get and still condense the vapours
it should work fine
you will be surprised at how hot water can get and still condense the vapours