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| View Poll Results: Do you have condensation in your fridgador? | |||
| No, I don't have it plugged in so no condensation. |
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7 | 17.50% |
| No, I have it plugged in but there is no condensation anyway. |
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8 | 20.00% |
| Yes, I have it plugged in and I get minimal amounts of condensation. |
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6 | 15.00% |
| Yes, I have it plugged in and I get some condensation. |
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6 | 15.00% |
| Yes, I have it plugged in and I get significant amounts of condensation. |
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0 | 0% |
| No... I don't have a crappy fridgador. |
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13 | 32.50% |
| Voters: 40. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#4 |
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Adjusting to the Life
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![]() Quick thoughts on this maybe a BOTL can agree or disagree with them. 1) Calibrate the hygrometers if that hasnt been done yet maybe it is at 65% and your hygrometer is just off 4% 2) Have you tried measuring humidity at different levels within the Edgestar? 3) I would plug the fridge, as you stated humidity is high outside the fridge and is most likely the problem since it isnt an enclosed enviornment. Then I would follow Mike's instructions on how to bring the humidity down on the beads as their equilibrium is set at 69% now. Once the beads are back to what you would like them to be I would throw in there and see how they do. 4) Not sure but running the edgestar still might be a good idea since the fan can circulate the air within the humidor. If your worried it might run too often you can pick up a timer cheap and plug into that. 5) Search on how others have dealt with condensation most will funnel it to a tray on the bottom and then empty that out if necessary. |
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