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#11
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On Dec 11, 10:15*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
On 12/11/2010 9:07 PM, brianDG303 wrote: Just as a discussion, I have had some experience trying to make even quite small containers (art exhibit display cases) dust tight with a notable lack of success, both by me and others I have observed. *As you seal the container, you don't actually change the amount of air circulation, I suspect; you just change the velocity of the air at the inlet points you can't close up. *I am sure there is some benefit to sealing, but to make a display case dust tight you seal up what you can, then provide positive pressure through a lot of filters, or in less critical situation just provide a lot of filter surface area to lower the resistance of the filtered air. *The problem is that temperature differences inside to outside create air pressure differences that push the air in and out. *Perhaps a solution is to seal up the trailer really well and then provide a source of inlet air that is drawn across a long desiccant tray or something. Maybe you need "ballast". Make the trailer airtight, but run a vent tube from it to a plastic garbage bag half full of air: when the trailer "breathes" it just moves air in and out of the garbage bag, and soon the dehumidifier has all the trailer air (and bag air) dry, dry, dry! -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) Andy, a few years ago, you were reputed to be moving to Arizona. Maybe it's time to reconsider where you live? I can confirm that you are very unlikely to have severe condensation issues here. However, if we can't talk you into moving to a more sensible climatic zone, I had to solve a similar situation many years ago when I needed to maintain a dry atmosphere inside an outside 4'x4' metal cabinet with sensitive electronic equipment. We ran two 60-watt light bulbs in series - worked great! About six to ten 60-watt bulbs operated at 60 V should do the trick. Mike |
#12
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On Dec 12, 5:05*pm, Mike the Strike wrote:
On Dec 11, 10:15*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote: On 12/11/2010 9:07 PM, brianDG303 wrote: Just as a discussion, I have had some experience trying to make even quite small containers (art exhibit display cases) dust tight with a notable lack of success, both by me and others I have observed. *As you seal the container, you don't actually change the amount of air circulation, I suspect; you just change the velocity of the air at the inlet points you can't close up. *I am sure there is some benefit to sealing, but to make a display case dust tight you seal up what you can, then provide positive pressure through a lot of filters, or in less critical situation just provide a lot of filter surface area to lower the resistance of the filtered air. *The problem is that temperature differences inside to outside create air pressure differences that push the air in and out. *Perhaps a solution is to seal up the trailer really well and then provide a source of inlet air that is drawn across a long desiccant tray or something. Maybe you need "ballast". Make the trailer airtight, but run a vent tube from it to a plastic garbage bag half full of air: when the trailer "breathes" it just moves air in and out of the garbage bag, and soon the dehumidifier has all the trailer air (and bag air) dry, dry, dry! -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) Andy, a few years ago, you were reputed to be moving to Arizona. Maybe it's time to reconsider where you live? *I can confirm that you are very unlikely to have severe condensation issues here. However, if we can't talk you into moving to a more sensible climatic zone, I had to solve a similar situation many years ago when I needed to maintain a dry atmosphere inside an outside 4'x4' metal cabinet with sensitive electronic equipment. *We ran two 60-watt light bulbs in series - worked great! *About six to ten 60-watt bulbs operated at 60 V should do the trick. Mike Yeah, my move was...uh...delayed. For now the dehumidifier is working. I don't see a lot of reason why there would be tons of air movement in and out. There isn't much temperature differential or change thereto over time. I guess lightbulbs could help too. 9B |
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