Okay, I got curious after I read some posts on cooled humidors and also cooledors.
I searched around and found the Kool Aid 56 by Igloo. If you visit their site you can get the specs, but the point is that it's a temperature controlled ice chest (using a Peltier cooling unit).
The capacity is 56 quart and after a couple searches (without finding the cheapest price) I spotted it for about $120 + shipping.
I contacted customer support and they said if a thermostat was added it voids the warranty, but those are details compared to the big picture.
So basically if someone can rig this with a thermostat there would be a 56 quart-sized temperature controlled humidor that does not zap humidity for $150 ?
What do you think?
Sox
Posts: 509 | Location: California, United States | Registered: October 11, 2004
How many boxes does that hold? Do you have any pics?
Rob G
"A man falls in love with cigars the way he falls in love with a woman. He knows it immediately but explaining why he loves is not so easy to enunciate. We never really know what makes us fall in love. Should we want to? To know is to lift the veil of mystery." - Unknown
Posts: 796 | Location: New York | Registered: November 11, 2003
If the air temperature is 70 degrees and the RH is 70% that means that there is a certain amount of moisture in the air when measured at that particular temperature.
The same air, when cooled by 10 degrees will hold more moisture, so the RH will go down.
I uwe a Haier Wine Cooler in warmer months with a pound of Climmax beads (70%) and the temperature set for 63 degrees as this is the warmest a Haier can be set.
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Posts: 9615 | Location: New York City | Registered: May 02, 2002
Rob G, no picts, but I did do a rough estimate and I think it can hold about 25 boxes, thats if i take out all the shelves out. Right now I got 12 boxes and one cedar tray full with six shelves.
Posts: 235 | Location: Corona, CA USA | Registered: May 26, 2004
I totally agree with you guys that little wine refrig's can be used, but I was pointing this unit out because it uses a Peltier cooling unit (the same 'kind' found in Bob Staebell's humidors). Peltier is not a brand, it is a style of cooling that does not affect humidity.
I thought this might be a viable option since it's more geared towards keeping humidity, supposedly it can be thermostat-equiped, and for $120 it is within most people's budget.
Just another option that might help someone.
Sox
Posts: 509 | Location: California, United States | Registered: October 11, 2004
Do you notice a large drop in RH when the unit turns on? If so, how long does it take to return to normal? Are you using climmax beads? Thanks.
Rob G
"A man falls in love with cigars the way he falls in love with a woman. He knows it immediately but explaining why he loves is not so easy to enunciate. We never really know what makes us fall in love. Should we want to? To know is to lift the veil of mystery." - Unknown
Posts: 796 | Location: New York | Registered: November 11, 2003
Rob G, the cooler never turns off it just stays at what setting you keep it at the warmest setting (68 degrees). But during the winter (right now i just unplug it) and yes im using 1/2 lb of 70% climmax beads.
Posts: 235 | Location: Corona, CA USA | Registered: May 26, 2004