Walk-in cooler with cool bot materials

Joined
Feb 10, 2024
Messages
97
I want to build a walk-in cooler for hanging deer in my barn. I plan 8x8x9 ft with barn having a concrete floor. I will still insulate the floor. The barn was designed for a walk-in cooler (before I bought it), so it has a drain installed in the floor. For those of you with building experience or experience with your own build, what materials did you use for building the cooler? I would think using something that cleans easily and maybe have a drain for easy cleaning? Of course, it needs a lot of insulation and cool bot approved AC unit. I would also like to install some type of gambrel system for multiple deer. I have done extensive research on cool bot website and you-tube but still undecided on what to use for materials for the inside walls.
 

bcjoe

FNG
Joined
Oct 18, 2024
Messages
24
Location
Texas, Wyoming, Colorado
If u r on a budget and depending on your location, look for some restaurant remodels or tear downs, they will throw away entire cooler boxes that you can rebuild. If do it from scratch 2x6 walls with a vapor barrier and it needs to be lined of a water resistant material so mold cannot grow in your cooler. The biggest thing is making sure it is sealed and mildew and mold resistant. I have heard of people using portable a/c to cool it but as a tech those things harbor mold and bacteria. I would buy once cry once and buy a used rack from a cooler if I could find one. It would save u some time and headache, good luck sir
 
OP
BossGobbler2024
Joined
Feb 10, 2024
Messages
97
If u r on a budget and depending on your location, look for some restaurant remodels or tear downs, they will throw away entire cooler boxes that you can rebuild. If do it from scratch 2x6 walls with a vapor barrier and it needs to be lined of a water resistant material so mold cannot grow in your cooler. The biggest thing is making sure it is sealed and mildew and mold resistant. I have heard of people using portable a/c to cool it but as a tech those things harbor mold and bacteria. I would buy once cry once and buy a used rack from a cooler if I could find one. It would save u some time and headache, good luck sir
thank you for the reply. Since I am not a builder, what consists of a vapor barrier? plastic or some specific material, is there a name for it? Lined with a water resistant material was my thought also but I don't know what material to look for. I have seen them in videos but no one ever says what it is called.... so I don't know what to look for.

I am in the buy once cry once camp also but I don't want to over engineer the thing either.
 

Burnsie

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
299
Location
Illinois
If u r on a budget and depending on your location, look for some restaurant remodels or tear downs, they will throw away entire cooler boxes that you can rebuild. If do it from scratch 2x6 walls with a vapor barrier and it needs to be lined of a water resistant material so mold cannot grow in your cooler. The biggest thing is making sure it is sealed and mildew and mold resistant. I have heard of people using portable a/c to cool it but as a tech those things harbor mold and bacteria. I would buy once cry once and buy a used rack from a cooler if I could find one. It would save u some time and headache, good luck sir
I just picked up an old cooler box from where I work, It was set to be demo'd. Pretty simple to take a part and reassemble. Only issue was someone had scavenged the refrigeration system on it, so I'm hunting for something that will work. My brother and his buddy also snagged a walk-in cooler box from a restaurant manager he knew. Has had many deer go through it over the years.
 

bcjoe

FNG
Joined
Oct 18, 2024
Messages
24
Location
Texas, Wyoming, Colorado
I would check with the HVAC supplier and an insulation company for jacketed pipe wrap material, it comes in large rolls that u can line the inner walls, air vapor barrier can be found at Home Depot type of store, there are some other ideas on u tube for that. That can get u started for sure
 

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JoeB

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Oct 21, 2020
Messages
201
I built mine using wood studs and layered foam insulation board in the pockets between studs. I calked each layer of foam all around the edges to seal it then added another layer of foam boarding till the stud pockets were full. Did this on the ceiling as well. I used osb on the walls to protect the foam for now. The plan is to add fiberglass panels like used on bathroom walls and calk the seams, this will allow me to wipe the walls down when needed. So far, I've not ran it allot just when weather is warm, and I or a friend harvest a deer. And then only a week tops each time. The cool Bot keeps my cooler as low as 34 degrees highest I've seen it was around 36-37 and it was close to 85 degrees outside, so they work well. As for a track system I got a few meat hangers with wheels from a guy that tore out a butcher shop freezer and had extras. I used angle iron and welded up a track to roll the deer carcass in and out. I made hangers to hang the track from the ceiling of the cooler. I have an electric hoist just outside the cooler to raise deer up and down while skinning then lower them down onto the track outside the cooler using the wheels from the butcher shop (I'm not sure what they are actually called), then roll the carcass into the cooler. I have one section of the track that is removable so I can close the door. Just remember not to open the door and grab a carcass and slid it out before putting the track section back in. I did that once and clean carcass hits the dirty barn floor quick, LOL.
 

Pezboat

WKR
Joined
Mar 15, 2018
Messages
407
Location
Minneapolis
I’ve been considering a walk-in cooler for a while now. Is there an advantage to a walk-in as opposed to something like this?


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Joined
Jan 15, 2016
Messages
369
My room is built into my shop, its 8'x8' with a 10' ceiling. I have 2"x6" construction with blown in insulation and OSB on the walls. I went to a steel supply business and got 2 1 1/2" pipes the width of my walls and built wooden brackets to hold them up. I can easily hang 2 elk in there, probably 3. I have a concrete floor with a drain, and I put a hose bib in the room. It works very well.
 
OP
BossGobbler2024
Joined
Feb 10, 2024
Messages
97
My room is built into my shop, its 8'x8' with a 10' ceiling. I have 2"x6" construction with blown in insulation and OSB on the walls. I went to a steel supply business and got 2 1 1/2" pipes the width of my walls and built wooden brackets to hold them up. I can easily hang 2 elk in there, probably 3. I have a concrete floor with a drain, and I put a hose bib in the room. It works very well.
Did you cover the OSB with any type of sealant or paint?
 
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