ricmac25
Token Cuban Guy
At some point do the beads lose effectiveness?
Ditto.emodx said:This topic belongs in the forum about storage, etc...
Yep, I concur with what EmoDx saidemodx said:This topic belongs in the forum about storage, etc... But the beads should last you for a long long time. In fact, they will pay for themselves a couple of times when you compare them to humidifier juice, distilled water, new foam, etc...I suggest not dousing them with water when the RH drops. Just put an old puck full of distilled water in your humi/cooler/fridge next to your beads when the RH dips. The beads will abosrb the moisture directly from the air. If you add water directly to the beads, you run the risk of them absorbing too much moisture too fast and splitting. Once you humi gets 2 points higher than what the beads are rated for, pull out the extra pucks. This is what I do and it works like a charm!
Emo
I keep asking this: Since water evaporates from the container/sponge you put into your humidor/coolidor and the beads absorb the vapors is distilled water really necessary? To distill water you collect the vapors and the impurities are left behind, right? It seems to me the beads will be absorbing pure water when absorbing the vapors so tap water is just as good as long as you using an indirect method of adding water to the beads. If I am wrong in this line of thought someone please tell me.emodx said:Just put an old puck full of distilled water in your humi/cooler/fridge next to your beads when the RH dips. The beads will abosrb the moisture directly from the air. If you add water directly to the beads, you run the risk of them absorbing too much moisture too fast and splitting. Once you humi gets 2 points higher than what the beads are rated for, pull out the extra pucks. This is what I do and it works like a charm!
Emo