Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/04/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]My point wasn't that 20C would cook your camera, but that if you left a 60 watt bulb in a metal case with an outside temperature of 20C, then the temp inside the case will quickly reach 40C or 50C. Very bad for most things. Try this at home: put a 60 watt light bulb inside a plastic cooler and see how soon you melt a hole in the corner. In a hot/dry atmosphere, your older pre-plastic Leica might be happy, but the other stuff you might have in with it might not be. Plastic lens caps, the plastic film components, the plastics in the straps will outgas. In a dry climate, the leather of your straps, cases, etc. will dry out. A cool dry climate is much better than a hot dry climate. That's my basic point. - --- On a cooler topic: Here's a picture of one of the Japanese units: http://www.toshu-ltd.co.jp/gaki/electronics/sample/drycabi2.html http://www.toshu-ltd.co.jp/gaki/electronics/sample/drycabi-pelche.html It uses the Peltier effect to reduce the temperature and thus the moisture content of the atmosphere. The goal is to reduce relative humidity to 30%. As us Minnesotans know, the colder the atmosphere the less moisture it can contain. My guess is that the unit operates two ways: * By condensing moisture onto the Peltier plate * By reducing the moisture holding power of the atmosphere by reducing the general temperature As an experiment, try checking the humidity of your refrigerator or freezer. It's actually quite low. Of course the moment you open it, the outside air rushes in, moisture condenses on all the cold surfaces etc. Karen >Karen > >Check your mathematics. 20 degrees Celsius is 68 Fahrenheit. > >It is humidity that is ruinous to the subject of the original discussion. >A refrigeration unit will INCREASE the relative humidity of its >space. > >A Leica can live a looooong life at 90 F. > >Jerry - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html