Humidity issues
Posted: Wed May 04, 2011 4:31 am
Hello all!
I'm sure this horse has been beaten many times both before and after death, but I'd really like your take on this... especially from fellow apartment builders.
I'm living in a smallish apartment in a house by the lake. The area has humidity swings and at my location even more so. 20-40% during winter, 60-80% during summer. We have AC but we also open windows a lot so the little one can get fresh air. The apartment is south-facing so I also get daily wild swings in temperature. In a nutshell, there's no way I could effectively control humidity on the large scale. Being a small apartment, it also provides no building space other than the kitchen table when the little one is catching Zs.
A logistical nightmare, yet I still have a strong feeling that I should attempt building an acoustic (even though I have NO IDEA where I'm gonna keep it once I'm done :) ).
Now, several options come to mind.
1. Watch the humidity on my flakey chinese rh meter and only build on appropriate times. With daily swings, highly unpractical.
2. Do an Adaboy. Large ziplock, work in the bag. Controlled RH, but problems with glue squeezeout and the fact that I have no place to keep a gobar deck (don't really like the idea of it all that much anyways).
3. Some sort of 1. and 2. combination. Right now I have two ideas.
a) I have a 6x6ft space in my building's basement and, while uncontrollable on the large scale because other apartments have "cubicles" there too, it may be possible to maybe seal off a bit of it using plastic sheets. I have no idea if this is even possible, walls and floor is bare concrete and I don't know if that can be sufficiently isolated, humidity-wise. Since there's no electricity in the basement, the humidification/dehumidification would have to be done with dessicants of some sort. Sounds scifi-ish but I thought to mention it just in case.
b) I have sort of a pantry in the apartment which has a doorless MDF closet in it, with shelves being roughly 30*30*30 inches, wood on 5 sides. I was thinking of maybe sealing off one or two shelves with plastic and duck tape to store the woods during construction and maybe even do the gluing in there. Again, dessicants would be needed but with it being a rather small space it just may be doable.
Any of you guys see any of this making sense and having a chance of working out? Any and all suggestions are welcome. Off the wall ideas and all...
I'm sure this horse has been beaten many times both before and after death, but I'd really like your take on this... especially from fellow apartment builders.
I'm living in a smallish apartment in a house by the lake. The area has humidity swings and at my location even more so. 20-40% during winter, 60-80% during summer. We have AC but we also open windows a lot so the little one can get fresh air. The apartment is south-facing so I also get daily wild swings in temperature. In a nutshell, there's no way I could effectively control humidity on the large scale. Being a small apartment, it also provides no building space other than the kitchen table when the little one is catching Zs.
A logistical nightmare, yet I still have a strong feeling that I should attempt building an acoustic (even though I have NO IDEA where I'm gonna keep it once I'm done :) ).
Now, several options come to mind.
1. Watch the humidity on my flakey chinese rh meter and only build on appropriate times. With daily swings, highly unpractical.
2. Do an Adaboy. Large ziplock, work in the bag. Controlled RH, but problems with glue squeezeout and the fact that I have no place to keep a gobar deck (don't really like the idea of it all that much anyways).
3. Some sort of 1. and 2. combination. Right now I have two ideas.
a) I have a 6x6ft space in my building's basement and, while uncontrollable on the large scale because other apartments have "cubicles" there too, it may be possible to maybe seal off a bit of it using plastic sheets. I have no idea if this is even possible, walls and floor is bare concrete and I don't know if that can be sufficiently isolated, humidity-wise. Since there's no electricity in the basement, the humidification/dehumidification would have to be done with dessicants of some sort. Sounds scifi-ish but I thought to mention it just in case.
b) I have sort of a pantry in the apartment which has a doorless MDF closet in it, with shelves being roughly 30*30*30 inches, wood on 5 sides. I was thinking of maybe sealing off one or two shelves with plastic and duck tape to store the woods during construction and maybe even do the gluing in there. Again, dessicants would be needed but with it being a rather small space it just may be doable.
Any of you guys see any of this making sense and having a chance of working out? Any and all suggestions are welcome. Off the wall ideas and all...