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expired Posted by LovelyCheetah | Staff • Aug 4, 2021
expired Posted by LovelyCheetah | Staff • Aug 4, 2021

Wesfital Evaporative Air Cooler With Remote Control for $79.99 + Free Shipping

$80

$260

69% off
Walmart
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Wesfital via Walmart [walmart.com] Has Evaporative Air Cooler With Remote Control for $79.99 + Free Shipping

This Air Cooler Fan has oscillating head for greater coverage and air circulation. You can also preset up to 12 hours with a rotary timer switch. This fan is ETL listed for safety.

Feature:
  • Provide smooth consistent air flow
  • Unique space saver design and quiet operation
  • Choose from 1 hour to 12 hours in 1 hour increments
  • LED display
  • Super Large Water Tank-4L

Specifications:
  • Color: White
  • Material: ABS+PP
  • Size:10.39" x 10.04" x 26.38"
  • N.W.:11.02 lbs
Community Notes
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Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Wesfital via Walmart [walmart.com] Has Evaporative Air Cooler With Remote Control for $79.99 + Free Shipping

This Air Cooler Fan has oscillating head for greater coverage and air circulation. You can also preset up to 12 hours with a rotary timer switch. This fan is ETL listed for safety.

Feature:
  • Provide smooth consistent air flow
  • Unique space saver design and quiet operation
  • Choose from 1 hour to 12 hours in 1 hour increments
  • LED display
  • Super Large Water Tank-4L

Specifications:
  • Color: White
  • Material: ABS+PP
  • Size:10.39" x 10.04" x 26.38"
  • N.W.:11.02 lbs

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47 Comments

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Aug 11, 2021
1,032 Posts
Joined Feb 2009
Aug 11, 2021
Ransom
Aug 11, 2021
1,032 Posts
Quote from kschlege :
Apparently you don't understand science ... evaporation causes a cooling effect, that's why this only works in dry environments.
Um. Duh? How do you think sweating works otherwise?

The point is if using it in an enclosed environment the cooling is offset by the raised humidity, which counters your body's ability to cool itself.

Evaporative coolers in an enclosed environment do nothing more than laying out a bunch of cups filled with water on the floor and running a fan over them. Doing this to cool your house is a bad idea unless you ALSO need to raise your humidity levels for health and comfort.

In an extremely dry environment indoors, or pretty much whatever outdoors since you can't raise the humidity any more than it already is, it can make sense.
Aug 11, 2021
162 Posts
Joined Nov 2017
Aug 11, 2021
supamonkey77
Aug 11, 2021
162 Posts
Quote from trifirst :
this one sounds different than other evaporative coolers that I have seen or used, it has a spot to put ice cubes. I wonder how well that works, seems like it could help even in humid environments.

for the people saying it won't work in humid environments, have you ever used one like this that you add ice cubes to?

there is no way this is normally $259 lol, its basically a fan with a few ice cube/water trays.

Since this is a 3rd party seller it only has a 30 day return window, but it can be returned to any walmart store. I might take a chance and buy one to try it out, if it doesn't work very well, it will be an easy return for me.
It does not work in very humid environment. In dry climates, It still does not work well unless the air is coming from outside. So you have to put it near a window.

As to the "ice", what you are talking about can be experienced by putting ice and a cloth behind a table fan. If anything those "Ice machine coolers" are making your house hotter by making the Ref work more to freeze more ice.

Aug 11, 2021
11,617 Posts
Joined Sep 2007
Aug 11, 2021
RugerRedhawk
Aug 11, 2021
11,617 Posts
Quote from WooHoo2You :
According to the DoE about 1/3 of Americans do not have air conditioning.
While I don't doubt there are some that struggle without AC in Arizona, I'm going to go out on a limb and suggest that a bigger chunk of that 1/3 live in northern states.
Aug 11, 2021
251 Posts
Joined Apr 2010
Aug 11, 2021
jacksons98
Aug 11, 2021
251 Posts
And honestly who is living in Arizona without air conditioning?

Evaporative coolers are awesome in Arizona. I will say on average it will cool the house 25-30 degrees from outside temperature. So it works well until about 100-105 I added one to my mom's house to help save her money on utilities and she loves it. Her Spring electric bills typically run around $140 and it dropped to $60. So that's a pretty huge difference and her house is much colder than she would keep it using the AC. She actually had to turn it off on occasion because it was too cold. Things she loves about it, colder air, costs almost nothing for electricity, fresh air in the house, and raises the humidity a little bit. Things she doesn't like is the seasonal maintenance and shut down. This is a real house unit, not one of these portables.
Aug 11, 2021
400 Posts
Joined Mar 2010
Aug 11, 2021
denshigomi
Aug 11, 2021
400 Posts
Quote from Ransom :
Oh good grief. Your counter to all of that is you can correct it by opening a window? Well yes, and then it's hot again. So there goes your cooling.
You looked for the smallest thing you could find and tried to reduce my comment to it so you can pretend I'm a simpleton.
1. I provided more than opening a window and any intelligent person can see that.
2. Full house evaporative cooling works by opening windows. Evaporative cooling doesn't fail because a window is opened. You're thinking of AC.
You've convinced me you don't have a communication issue; you simply don't understand evaporative cooling.
Quote from Ransom :
I was very clear evaporative coolers give a local benefit in front of it but it's countered by raising the humidity in the space.
I was very clear as well. Open a window or use it in a room that doesn't receive sufficient cooling from AC. The AC will strip excess humidity from the air.
Quote from Ransom :
If you have the windows open, you don't have a cool space anymore anyway.
Already explained. Opening a window doesn't defeat evaporative cooling. If it's the only cooling solution, then it's practically required.
Quote from Ransom :
And in your specialized scenario, the obvious solution is to run a fan and use your body's evaporative cooling. Which will function great as long as you don't raise the humidity in the space...
Speaking of "good grief" comments, do you hear yourself?
My solution: Use a product like this and be comfortable for a minor increase in your electric bill.
Your solution: Don't use a cooling product. Just be uncomfortable and sweat.
Wow, why didn't I think of that? Why have AC or evaporative coolers at all? We can sweat! At least you allowed the person in your scenario to use a fan. You may be spiteful, but you're not a barbarian.
1
Aug 11, 2021
400 Posts
Joined Mar 2010
Aug 11, 2021
denshigomi
Aug 11, 2021
400 Posts
Quote from Ransom :
Um. Duh? How do you think sweating works otherwise?

The point is if using it in an enclosed environment the cooling is offset by the raised humidity, which counters your body's ability to cool itself.

Evaporative coolers in an enclosed environment do nothing more than laying out a bunch of cups filled with water on the floor and running a fan over them. Doing this to cool your house is a bad idea unless you ALSO need to raise your humidity levels for health and comfort.

In an extremely dry environment indoors, or pretty much whatever outdoors since you can't raise the humidity any more than it already is, it can make sense.
Goodness you're tiring. The way you talk makes it sound like you're all theory without practical experience. Where do you live?
Theory is wrong if the real world disproves it. So let's stop talking theory and see what the real world looks like.
I live in a hot dry climate. I spent my youth living in houses cooled by full house evaporative coolers. We called them swamp coolers. They worked wonderfully.
Now I'm in a house with AC. The AC pulls what little precious humidity I have out of the air. To combat that, I run 3 humidifiers practically non-stop.
That's not unique. A LOT of people in hot dry climates use humidifiers to combat the dry air.

There you have it. Short and sweet. Your theory about adding water to the air being undesirable is poppycock. AC pulls humidity out of the air. There are people who live in dry climates.
You live in a humid climate? Yeah, don't use an evaporative cooler. No one is disputing that.
Drop the fantasy about a hermetically sealed room with eternally rising humidity. It's not realistic!
Quote from Ransom :
Doing this to cool your house is a bad idea unless you ALSO need to raise your humidity levels for health and comfort.
What have you been arguing about this whole time? OF COURSE evaporative coolers are used in environments where the humidity levels need to be raised.
Evaporative coolers only work in the environments they're intended for? In your words "Um. Duh?"
The whole point I've been making is that these can work in the environment they're intended for.
But you've been stomping around saying evaporative coolers are bad because they reduce your body's ability to perform its own evaporative cooling through sweat.
If you reduce the ambient temperature with an evaporative cooler, you don't NEED to sweat. Or even if you still do, an evaporative cooler provides greater cooling than the decrease in sweat effectiveness caused by the raise in humidity.
In other words, sweating alone will keep you hotter than running air through an evaporative cooler and then sweating. Why you continually suggest sweating is a better alternative to being at a comfortable temperature I'll never understand.
1
Aug 11, 2021
1,032 Posts
Joined Feb 2009
Aug 11, 2021
Ransom
Aug 11, 2021
1,032 Posts
I give up. Some people are still arguing for cooling their home on a hot day with the window open. And spending electricity to do it.

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Aug 11, 2021
6,134 Posts
Joined Jun 2005
Aug 11, 2021
PhantasmX
Aug 11, 2021
6,134 Posts
You need to open the window while using this.
Aug 11, 2021
400 Posts
Joined Mar 2010
Aug 11, 2021
denshigomi
Aug 11, 2021
400 Posts
Quote from Ransom :
I give up. Some people are still arguing for cooling their home on a hot day with the window open. And spending electricity to do it.
You're willfully misrepresenting my position while you continue to argue against cooling your home because you can just sweat.
I'm arguing for one of two things. Both of which have a long history of being used successfully.
1. Use evaporative cooling with a window open. It works very well. Proper science and EXTENSIVE EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE support this.
2. Use local evaporative cooling with a window closed and an AC unit that removes excess humidity from the air.

I ignored your insanely wrong refrigerator example from before. But hey, you're still here so let's revisit it since it's a perfect example demonstrating that you don't understand the science involved at all. You said:
Quote from Ransom :
You are not getting this at all or understanding the science.

A unit like this is analogous to opening your refrigerator and feeling the cold air. It feels good in a very local space, but it overall HEATS your home.
You're correct about the refrigerator, which is irrelevant because no one claimed otherwise.
But you're completely wrong about the evaporative cooler. I don't know how you could possibly believe you're correct unless "You are not getting this at all or understanding the science."
Generally speaking, an evaporative cooler will generate heat from the fan and the pump. But the heat generated is trivial compared to the cooling effect they produce. They don't heat a home. They cool it. No, it's not "magic" as you mocked. The trade off is that the humidity rises. So what do we do? IF THE HUMIDITY IS TOO HIGH, OPEN A WINDOW OR LET THE AC LOWER THE HUMIDITY.
You can mock the idea of opening a window, but once again, empirical evidence has shown this to be HIGHLY effective. So whatever big brain science you think you understand that says this won't work is wrong, which isn't surprising since you think running an evaporative cooler heats a room similar to opening a refrigerator door.
Aug 11, 2021
1,032 Posts
Joined Feb 2009
Aug 11, 2021
Ransom
Aug 11, 2021
1,032 Posts
Quote from denshigomi :
You're willfully misrepresenting my position while you continue to argue against cooling your home because you can just sweat.
I'm arguing for one of two things. Both of which have a long history of being used successfully.
1. Use evaporative cooling with a window open. It works very well. Proper science and EXTENSIVE EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE support this.
2. Use local evaporative cooling with a window closed and an AC unit that removes excess humidity from the air.

I ignored your insanely wrong refrigerator example from before. But hey, you're still here so let's revisit it since it's a perfect example demonstrating that you don't understand the science involved at all. You said:

You're correct about the refrigerator, which is irrelevant because no one claimed otherwise.
But you're completely wrong about the evaporative cooler. I don't know how you could possibly believe you're correct unless "You are not getting this at all or understanding the science."
Generally speaking, an evaporative cooler will generate heat from the fan and the pump. But the heat generated is trivial compared to the cooling effect they produce. They don't heat a home. They cool it. No, it's not "magic" as you mocked. The trade off is that the humidity rises. So what do we do? IF THE HUMIDITY IS TOO HIGH, OPEN A WINDOW OR LET THE AC LOWER THE HUMIDITY.
You can mock the idea of opening a window, but once again, empirical evidence has shown this to be HIGHLY effective. So whatever big brain science you think you understand that says this won't work is wrong, which isn't surprising since you think running an evaporative cooler heats a room similar to opening a refrigerator door.
I didn't say don't cool and just sweat. Do cool, but cool in an energy efficient and actually useful manner that won't damage your home. I did say don't do shitty localized cooling while raising your humidity which makes the entire place worse.

And yes, if you open your window to decrease the humidity, then you just also lost all the benefit from your cooling and all your energy was now wasted.

Everyone but you agrees these items units are a waste of energy and money. Everyone also agrees that in certain circumstances DIFFERENT evaporative coolers can be worth it, but it's rare and this unit isn't it. This is just a larger version of these:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2...urA&t=777s

Anyway I'm done. Cheers.
Aug 11, 2021
12,038 Posts
Joined Aug 2007
Aug 11, 2021
kschlege
Aug 11, 2021
12,038 Posts
Quote from Ransom :
Um. Duh? How do you think sweating works otherwise?

The point is if using it in an enclosed environment the cooling is offset by the raised humidity, which counters your body's ability to cool itself.

Evaporative coolers in an enclosed environment do nothing more than laying out a bunch of cups filled with water on the floor and running a fan over them. Doing this to cool your house is a bad idea unless you ALSO need to raise your humidity levels for health and comfort.

In an extremely dry environment indoors, or pretty much whatever outdoors since you can't raise the humidity any more than it already is, it can make sense.
I guess everyone here in Colorado that have house evaporative coolers for their homes must have been sold snake oil ... I'd guess about 1/4 of the houses have them. You see them on the sides of houses or their roofs everywhere.

And yes, they are outside, but indoor ones work too. At night you can open up all the doors and windows to get rid of the humidity if you think it's too high. Most drier climates get cool at night.
Last edited by kschlege August 11, 2021 at 10:37 AM.
Aug 11, 2021
400 Posts
Joined Mar 2010
Aug 11, 2021
denshigomi
Aug 11, 2021
400 Posts
Quote from Ransom :
I didn't say don't cool and just sweat. Do cool, but cool in an energy efficient and actually useful manner that won't damage your home.
I presented a scenario where this could be used in a hot and dry climate to improve the temperature in a single room where whole house AC was not sufficient. Your reply was:
Quote from Ransom :
And in your specialized scenario, the obvious solution is to run a fan and use your body's evaporative cooling.
In case you forgot, your body's evaporative cooling is sweating. So yes, you very plainly said not to use safe, tested, effective, undamaging, beneficial cooling in favor of being uncomfortable and sweating.
Quote from Ransom :
I did say don't do shitty localized cooling while raising your humidity which makes the entire place worse.
Raising humidity in a hot, dry climate doesn't "make the entire place worse". It makes it better.
Once again, don't use appliances in an environment that they aren't intended for!
Quote from Ransom :
And yes, if you open your window to decrease the humidity, then you just also lost all the benefit from your cooling and all your energy was now wasted.
Empirical evidence has proven that statement to be completely wrong. I'll rehash the concept of the whole house evaporative cooler if I need to. They're still in use around the world AND THEY WORK. They also work on a smaller scale, such as a single room. Why would you believe otherwise?
Quote from Ransom :
Everyone but you agrees these items units are a waste of energy and money. Everyone also agrees that in certain circumstances DIFFERENT evaporative coolers can be worth it, but it's rare and this unit isn't it.
Oh, EVERYONE but me agrees. You do realize that can't possibly be correct, don't you? Products like this are being built and sold all over in large quantities. The people buying them agree with me. There are also people who don't buy them who agree with me. People who understand the science but either don't live in the climate where they're useful, or whose living conditions otherwise don't benefit from it.
Quote from Ransom :
This is just a larger version of these:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2...urA&t=777s
First of all, to expand your comparison, this unit is just a smaller version of a whole house evaporative cooler, which can drop the temperature of an entire house by 30 degrees Fahrenheit depending on outside temperature and RH. Are you disputing that? You're going to have a hard time convincing people that evaporative coolers don't work.

Second, that guy is in the Midwest in a COOL and HUMID environment!
His environment is the EXACT OPPOSITE of the one this is designed for!
80% RH outside, brought down to 50% RH inside by an AC.
The room is already at 67 degrees! He's wearing a jacket! I'd be too if my room was cooled to 67 degrees!
OF COURSE IT DOESN'T WORK WELL FOR HIM!

Third, he keep referring to it as a "personal AC", which obviously it isn't. It's a personal evaporative cooler. It should be marketed as such and compared as such.

Fourth, even he (in his cool, humid environment) says it would work in conjunction with AC to provide an additional personal temperature drop because the 3 degree drop it achieves for him is still noticeable.

Once again, use these in HOT and DRY climates!
I'm running 3 humidifiers and they can barely get my inside RH to 30%!
Do you understand how evaporative cooling gets better and better as RH gets lower and as ambient temperature rises? Lower RH and higher temperature both contribute to increased evaporation, which in turn results in a greater drop in temperature.
Last edited by denshigomi August 11, 2021 at 12:34 PM.
Pro
Aug 12, 2021
8,059 Posts
Joined Mar 2018
Aug 12, 2021
WooHoo2You
Pro
Aug 12, 2021
8,059 Posts
Quote from RugerRedhawk :
While I don't doubt there are some that struggle without AC in Arizona, I'm going to go out on a limb and suggest that a bigger chunk of that 1/3 live in northern states.
A "bigger chunk" might be in northern states but if you've ever driven outside of city limits of Las Vegas you'd see the sprawling shanty towns surrounding the city proper. Same goes for anywhere in AZ. Just because you live with something does not mean all people enjoy the same luxury. Even if they have central air installed....can they afford the 300-500 dollar power bill to run it when they live in a poorly insulated trailer and it is 100+ outside...in the shade? Bet they eat sushi to cool them down?
Aug 12, 2021
423 Posts
Joined Feb 2010
Aug 12, 2021
Jordan821
Aug 12, 2021
423 Posts
Sooooooooooo…anyone actually order this and tried it? How well will this do in a 3 car garage in Vegas?

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Aug 13, 2021
71 Posts
Joined Apr 2014
Aug 13, 2021
ronr9061
Aug 13, 2021
71 Posts
I bought this and just received it. I live in the Chicago area, so humidity is not exactly low, but not as high as other places as well. Using this in the home office to help cool down the room. If you are expecting it to cool it down like an AC, this will not work. But it has helped bring the room temp down by a couple of degrees.

Side note, the instructions are awful and I still can't figure out what they are calling the "ice bin" without having to open the machine up. I just fill the resevior up with ice water and add a few cubes and it works.
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