To: | "Dan Levin" <djl@andlev.com>, <towertalk@contesting.com> |
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Subject: | Re: [TowerTalk] Equipment Corrosion |
From: | "Tower (K8RI)" <tower@rogerhalstead.com> |
Date: | Thu, 26 Aug 2004 14:04:14 -0400 |
List-post: | <mailto:towertalk@contesting.com> |
An open air shack, or unheated building is about the worst place you can put electronic equipment. The air flow is not completely free and every time there is a temperature decrease you will get condensation. I don't know what kind of climate you have, but the description leads me to believe you are in a warmer climate than Michigan.<:-))
Your problem is a combination of the two. The building is too leaky and moistre gets in. The temperature falls each evening, and with weather changes, creating condensation. The building needs to be made more weather proof. It needs a more constant temperature and it needs the humidity kept relatively low. A small window type airconditioner such as the ones used in mobile homes should do nicely. I picked up one for $10 and have been using it to keep the temperature and humidity down in my shop. They tiny little airconditioner doesn't use a lot of power and it does an admirable job on a 28 X 40 foot shop. Of course the shop is well sealed and insulated. Even the concrete floor is insulated from the ground under it. In either case, I suppose that I could install some kind of dehumidifier as The building can not be "air tight" but from your description it could use a wee bit of tightening. Put in some vapor barrier and interior walls, a dehumidifier, or small airconditioner. The airconditioner would be the best bet. Then create some small vents that you can open and close. The building does need to breathe, but not to its current extent. What you have now is a design that will destroy equipment in a relatively short time. Up here in the "North Country" where we regularly see some drastic daily changes in temperature, I often see some very nice rigs that have been destroyed from storing them in unheated garages and sheds. Many of the pieces are rare and would be valuable except for the fact they are beyond restoration. These were once prized stations of some ham, but are now no more than junk because their heirs didn't know how to store them. I'm currently trying to restore an old Hallicrafters S-40B to operation for a friend so he can listen on his father's old receiver. It was stored in a barn. Out of all the equipment from that estate, it is the only piece that appears to be salvageable.
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