Posted: Oct 30th, '06, 16:29
Is it just me or are those a new type of snowgun we have not seen at K before? Movable mini towers with three seperate nozzles?
KV
KV
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They were around last year in various places. They blow a finer mist from what I can remember.KV wrote:Is it just me or are those a new type of snowgun we have not seen at K before? Movable mini towers with three seperate nozzles?
KV
The low E guns use less compressed air, thus they save energy. You have to freeze water and in a snow gun this happens two ways:Gangsta Rider wrote:Low E wonder if they blow as much snow? theres got to be an effect.
thanks 4 the splain'in rogman...you guys use Sno-max?rogman wrote:The low E guns use less compressed air, thus they save energy. You have to freeze water and in a snow gun this happens two ways:Gangsta Rider wrote:Low E wonder if they blow as much snow? theres got to be an effect.
1. When the compressed air is allowed to expand it cools. In the same way, a bottle of propane gets cold when you use it.
2. When water evaporates what is left gets cooler. Example, sweat evaporating from your body makes you cooler.
Because there is less compressed air used in the low E guns, you are relying more on evaporation. Making the mist finer makes it easier for the water to evaporate (more surface area). What you see floating away when snow is being made isn't snow blowing off into the woods, it's water vapor. It is supposed to do that. That's why it takes so much water to make snow (on the order of 200,000 gallons/acre-foot) Not all the water is turned into snow, some of it evaporates. That is why low humidity is important to snow making.
Really cool. Thanks for putting that stuff on line, and for not compressing the hell out of it just to save bandwidth (~193 megs).spinmaster wrote:They are HKD Ranger Low Energy guns. In cold temps - 20-24 degrees - they work real well and produce pretty much the same amount of snow as the K3000.
Vidoe of Monday's snowmaking is available at: http://www.killington.com/pressreleases ... 41&nobar=1