This is the Message Centre for Malabarista - now with added pony

From James-Hamid

Post 41

Malabarista - now with added pony

What sticks? I only read that it was two walls crossing to an X with a top on set on a house... There'd have to be moisture coming from somewhere in the first place to let it evaporate...


From James-Hamid

Post 42

james-hamid

There are sticks and the crossed walls are nothing to do with wind. Think


From James-Hamid

Post 43

Malabarista - now with added pony

In that case, they must be for increasing the surface area, and the sticks are either:
a) green and damp
b)wet
or c) for hanging wet cloths on


From James-Hamid

Post 44

james-hamid

Think - washing lines


From James-Hamid

Post 45

Malabarista - now with added pony

That's what I said - hanging wet cloths!


From James-Hamid

Post 46

james-hamid

And?


From James-Hamid

Post 47

Malabarista - now with added pony

And the water from them will evaporate, cooling the air around them, meaning less air pressure because of reduced browninan motion, thus drawing the air from below upward.


From James-Hamid

Post 48

james-hamid

No - cold air drops. Why the courtyard?


From James-Hamid

Post 49

Malabarista - now with added pony

Cold air drops, but the warm air would move upward...


From James-Hamid

Post 50

james-hamid

The washing line (the wind tower) creates the cold air. It drops (a bit wet) into the corner of the house. All the rooms are interconnected. The courtyard id hot. The air rises. It sucks the cool air through the rooms. AC - no cost. It works.


From James-Hamid

Post 51

Malabarista - now with added pony

Ah, I get it now, the wind tower ISN'T above the courtyard, that's what had me confused... We're currently learning about a similar system for ventilating windowless bathrooms, the drawback is that it only works when there's a difference in temperature.


From James-Hamid

Post 52

james-hamid

That's where the Arabs were clever - the washing provided the essential difference. Think about it.

smiley - cheers


From James-Hamid

Post 53

Malabarista - now with added pony

Exactly, killing two birds with one stone! That's what I love about my semester - we have a lot of different countries and continents represented, so a lot of different cultural influences.
My workgroup consists of me (Germany/Netherlands)
Ping (China)
Jonas (Morroco/Belgium)
Mohammed + Nafaa (Tunisia)
Igor + Julija (Kazachstan)
Anastasia (Russia)
Derya + Medine + Emrah + a lot of others I don't work with that often (Turkey)
Amani (a tiny African country noones ever heard of)
Jonny (Korea/Poland)
Beate, Christoph (Poland)
Ronnie (Pakistan)
and there's a lot more in the Semester, not to mention the Uni...


From James-Hamid

Post 54

james-hamid

You need to come to Morocco (or Yemen). The art and it makes you feel small


From James-Hamid

Post 55

Malabarista - now with added pony

Ah yes, I'd like to travel a lot when I have time and money...smiley - ermLike that's likely to happen... But next on my list are China and India, I saved up for that by translating, just need the time now.


From James-Hamid

Post 56

james-hamid

I lived in India for a bit - Madras. 75% of the population live in 33 cities- there is a vast amount of space in between. Sorry I don't get on with Chinese, though I love Indians. I respect orientals but cannot like them. Pure unadutarated prejudice, I am sure and when they take over the world - I will have to change.


From James-Hamid

Post 57

Malabarista - now with added pony

Well, my project partner last year was Chinese, she wants to take me home, and I have a friend in India... I hate going to other countries as a tourist, I prefer being able to visit an "insider".


From James-Hamid

Post 58

james-hamid

Read the May/June 'African Rennaisance' Adonis & Abbey


From James-Hamid

Post 59

Malabarista - now with added pony

What's that?


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