amateuraficionado
Active Member
- Joined
- Jan 12, 2008
- Messages
- 2,301
Is anyone else spraying their beads every week? Mine will not stay charged for very long and I am using extra beads.
Joe
Bad seal? What do you have for a humi?
I have a Ravallo 300 ct. It has a very good seal and the temperature never get below 62 degrees in the room that I keep it in. When I was using Boveda packs last year, I never had a problem with a RH swing and they are very low maintenance.
Is this your first winter with this humi Joe? If so, it could require a "spring" reseasoning.
Yes it was DeVonn. I have had a shot glass with distilled water in the humi for the last month. No luck....
I know a lot of guys here swear by it but the "shot glass in the humi" has never worked for me. The owner of my local B&M was trying to explain it to me one time. The way he was explaining it didn't make much sense but I knew what he was trying to say. It seems to be some kind of phenomenon where the water needs to actually be in some type of a medium, i.e. a sponge, beads, super absorbent polymer etc., in order to transfer most effectively. I tried the shot glass/dish of water when I first seasoned my humi. After about a week the rH moved one or two points. In my impatience I decided to speed things up. I soaked a clean washcloth in distilled water and wiped down the entire interior. I left it for 24 hours and repeated. The humidity held steady around 69%-70% rH(I didn't know any better back then) for about three days iirc, and then I introduced all of my cigars. I didn't get any warping of the wood you hear many caution about.
I don't know if it's really so, or maybe I'm just more attentive to it than I've ever been, but it seems like this winter was particularly dry here in the northeast. I had to reseason my humi a couple of months ago and everything's been fine since then. I'd recommend just moving your sticks to a tupperware container, reseasoning your humi the same as when you first got it, and you should be good to go.