Yup I think that at least a blind will help keep the sun out a bit, as well as protection from any who may be passing through. You never know. Look forward to the pics! Roger![]()
Yup I think that at least a blind will help keep the sun out a bit, as well as protection from any who may be passing through. You never know. Look forward to the pics! Roger![]()
Just another day at the office!
This is a Honeywell evaporative "bypass" type humidifier. It has a drum filter that slowly turns (1rpm) picks up water and allows air to flow through the filter media. I chose this model for several reasons. 1) Absolutely no white dust fallout, 2) water pan with float fill as opposed to the curtain type that runs water continuously during the on cycle, 3) very low power consumption of only 30w when running, 4) overflow drain just in case of a stuck float valve. It is fully automatic and has a capacity of up to 2000 sq ft and can use either hard or soft water. I'm tapping into the soft water just to help keep calcification to a minimum. The filter media is easily replacable ($10) and should be done twice a year.
Here you can see the fan that pulls air through the unit. Since it is a "bypass" type humidifier it normally depends on the house A/C ductwork to push and pull the air through the unit. I bought this 6" "duct booster" fan (250cfm) and attached it where the ductwork bypass would attach. It is controlled along with the drum by the humidistat so that they are both turned on and off at the same time. This should make for a very economical system. Also it should provide ample air circulation within the humidor.
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That is nice! Any houses for sale in your neighborhood? I'm thinking you'd be a great neighbor.![]()
I agree. I am basically in awe of this project. Can't wait to see it finished and fully stocked.
Note the color difference between the cedar next to the door and the redwood siding that the humidifier is mounted to. The redwood makes the cedar look brown. These are the back side of the beveled redwood siding. I reversed it so as to level the mounting surface for the humidifier. I love redwood. Too bad is has little or no fragrance.
Last edited by DeeDubya; 06-15-2009 at 04:46 PM.
Wow man, I am thoroughly impressed.
I have made it a rule never to smoke more that one cigar at a time.
Mark Twain
Finally got the "Traceable" Humidity/Temperature meter. It is NIST certified and they send the ISO calibration certificate with it. Guaranteed within +/-2%RH it will be great to calibrate my other cheapies. I like the Min/Max recall on both temp and RH. This thing is small enough to fit in all but the smallest humidors. It's not unreasonable at $60 when it removes all the doubt that I had with the other units. I ordered this one from The Weather Store but you might find it for less. The Wholesale Dist. is: http://www.control3.com/
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Last edited by DeeDubya; 06-16-2009 at 04:30 PM.
Looks like you are nearly ready to go guns on stocking it up. I was wondering if you had a sensor of some kind to measure the humididty that is connected to your humidifer? Can you set it and forget it or are you going to have to micromanage the equipment to make your RH right? Looks great!![]()
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Just another day at the office!
Go back to the pic of the humidifier. A Honeywell humidistat (cheap one) came with the humidfier and is mounted right above it. I will have to (by trial and error) adjust it to the humidity I need according to the hygrometer. So, some tweeking will be necessary, but I should be able to manage that. We'll see. I set it up when I got home today and I'm reading 81 degrees and 60%RH. That's not a bad start without even running the humidifier nor having any additional cooling (It's 100 degrees outside right now, nearly as bad as Kansas weather, but at least we still have birds).
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