I have been considering capturing my HVAC water for gardening purposes for some time. This is
not a new idea. But I was wondering how MUCH water I would capture, and whether it would be worth the effort.
First, note that I live in the southeast USA, where it is very humid. So the HVAC does run and my HVAC can pull more water out of the air than, say, someone in Arizona.
My testing opportunity came yesterday, when the fan motor on my 4 ton HVAC went out at the house during the afternoon. This is a minor repair ($48), but it will take me 36 hours to get it done.
In the meantime I put
my portable AC unit in my bedroom and closed the door. Its about .75 ton. It was purchased because I have a two story house but only 1 HVAC unit and sometimes it gets warm upstairs. This unit can be moved from room to room as needed. Its also very handy when we lose power or our HVAC dies, changing HVAC repairs from "crises" to "annoyances that I can take time to fix".
This unit is different from some that I have seen in that it has an on-board container to hold the water, as well as a drain line that can be activated by pressing the nozzle into a second position.
for this test I used the onboard container. In 1 hour it "produced" slightly more than 3 cups of water. It would take about 5 hours to get a gallon.
This is of interest to me for 2 reasons.
1) we lost water pressure during Ike, but I had a generator.
2) It implies that my 4 ton unit "might" make as much as 1 gallon per hour when its running. (this partly depends on how humid it is inside the house, I'm assuming diminishing returns would apply, but that new humid air would be cycled in continually through normal life activities)
Right now my AC drain goes back into the municipal water supply, as most newer homes do (the secondary drain does exit the house per code). its amusing to think that the city of houston may get a million gallons of water per day injected into the system for free. I also can think of implications in the future where electricity might be easier to get than water.
the upshot of it is that if I'm going to stay here, it would probably be worth a few dollars in PVC pipe to route the water out of the attic and down to a rain barrel.