You have blinders on, or we have different starting assumptions, and you are introducing unnecessary degrees of complexity.Woodsrider wrote: We are missing each other here Moose. Sure are.The Freeaire Polar Power System is simply an air side economizer. Same concept that has been used for years to reduce energy usage in building HVAC systems. It is used in every combined cycle plant I have ever worked in to save fuel cost. It is the preferred method for cooling data centers to save energy. It is a well proven concept. If you have outdoor condensers/compressors.
The cold outside air is free. Yes, I get that. No energy gets expended removing the heat. Think the opposite of solar thermal. Fans are used to draw the cold air in (fans use far less energy than compressors). As the air warms in the walk-in cooler fans reject the warmer air outside; air which is still much colder than the air inside the lodge. It still contains heat lost from the lodge, and instead of being returned to the lodge as it would with an indoor condenser, it goes outside and is lost. Total system <electrical> energy consumption is reduced. If you don't believe me run an energy balance calculation. I'm sure there are plenty of well documented ones online.
I agree that heat recovery from compression makes sense but only is you have to run the compressors.
Also, the Freeaire System uses advanced controls, which in itself, compressors running or not, creates efficiencies. Yes, advanced controls are good for any system.
Even better, here is what Killy had to say: Because Killy is such a recognized thermodynamics expert
"Since 2007, Killington Resort has converted 12 walk-in coolers to Freeaire Refrigeration. Freeaire, a Vermont-based company, created and installs systems that use cold, outside air to refrigerate coolers instead of using high energy consuming compressors to cool stored food.
HOW MUCH ENERGY DOES FREEAIRE REFRIGERATION SAVE?
During the 2011-12 ski season the cooler at Rams Head ran for 125 days. During that time, the energy use dropped nearly 1,700 Kilowatt hours This is electricity savings only, and does not account for heat lost in the building that has to be replaced. from when cooling was entirely compressor-based. This single, seasonal cooler’s electrical savings reduced our carbon footprint by 1.1 tons of CO2. Savings can be found in year round coolers as well as seasonal coolers. A year round cooler uses roughly 8,500 Kwh less than it did before the installation of the Freeaire system in a one and a half year period. This one cooler reduces Killington Resort’s carbon emissions by 2.51 tons of CO2 in the same amount of time.
Retrofitting all of the coolers here at Killington Resort with the Freeaire system has greatly reduced energy usage, and has reduced CO2 emissions by 13.2 tons a year."
http://www.killington.com/site/culture/ ... ndex.html/
System one: All heat stays in building envelope.
System two: Waste heat from cooler is exhausted outside.
System two is less efficient in the winter by exactly the amount of lost heat extracted when the Freeaire system operates.
It doesn't matter whether the heat needed to keep the building temp at 60 degrees is from condenser heat, compressor heat, or propane fired heat. If you remove a certain amount of condenser/compressor heat, (by eliminating the compressor and using cold outside air and venting waste heat outdoors) it will have to be replaced by an equal amount of propane heat. There is no savings in the winter by eliminating the compressor/condenser heat. There is only substituting electrical savings for propane expenditure.
You can talk about the difference in energy costs between propane and electricity, and carbon footprint between electricity and propane, but the energy lost with Freeaire in the winter is less efficient.
If you can't see that difference, if you don't understand that in the winter a household refrigerator is 100% efficient*, I don't think I can explain it in much more concise terms.
Bubba might be on to this.
*If you vent the household fridge outside for "free" cold air, you are losing heat outside the building envelope, and it is not free.