I am looking to put an air cooled chiller in Alaska for use during brief periods in the summer. Otherwise, the unit will sit in the elements. Design condition is supposed to be -70 deg F. Draining the unit and letting it sit dry over the winter is apparently not an option. So I am looking into anti-freeze solutions. I would need to have a heater on the chiller and the piping heat-traced I'm sure. And I am thinking I would need to run the pump all the time, or at least below a certain ambient just to keep things from freezing.
The glycol I use in everyday life (not in the arctic) never exceeds 40%. And even then the viscosity and heat transfer property make it difficult to deal with. I can't see any freeze protection down to -70 deg F. with the everyday glycol I use elsewhere. Any recommendations on anti-freeze that would be friendly to an air-cooled chiller and be suitable for pumping and heat transfer?
The glycol I use in everyday life (not in the arctic) never exceeds 40%. And even then the viscosity and heat transfer property make it difficult to deal with. I can't see any freeze protection down to -70 deg F. with the everyday glycol I use elsewhere. Any recommendations on anti-freeze that would be friendly to an air-cooled chiller and be suitable for pumping and heat transfer?