With Airdrop, you'll be able to extract water from the air until the Imperial Forces destroy your moisture farm
Ed Linacre’s Airdrop is a simple device that literally sucks water
out of thin air. Airdrop — not to be confused with Apple’s excruciating
new file-transfer service of the same name — could allow moisture farms
like those run by Luke Skywalker’s Uncle Owen.
Airdrop consists of a mast-like tube with a wind-powered turbine that
sucks air down into a coiled metal pipe. The air descends under the
earth and cools until it hits 100% humidity and the water starts to drip
out. Linacre installed one in his mother’s back yard in Australia and
it pulled out a liter of water in a day.
The units also have storage tanks, from where they pump out the water into underground irrigation systems.
The units are small, can be self installed and are easy to repair
while still in the ground. Linacre sees farmers installing fleets of
them in fields, where they could sit and water the plants with no human
help. The pumps are even solar-powered, a great idea in deserts.
The Airdrop has just won a James Dyson award. Hopefully this will
accelerate its progress into the driest parts of the world. And if you
are a moisture farmer, and you end up using these, I have a protocol
droid you might be interested in. You might think you have no need for a
protocol droid, but this droid’s first job was programing binary load
lifters very similar to your Airdrop irrigators in most respects.

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