Live Stoner Chat Live Stoner Chat - Jan-Mar '25

Your pigs blankets taste better lol
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If you don't have a hotdog but you do have papers...

Jimbo smoke reviewed their new 505 Headbanger. He used Rotini pasta as a filter!

:crying::crying::crying:

It's actualy a good idea with the spiral smoke path. I usualy roll slim but I'll give it a try just for fun.

Would Fusilli work?
 
@Olderfart
Your homemade "cannatrol" experiments had me thinking that a whole tent environment could possibly made.

Grows since I moved to another room have dried in a week or less. Thank the ganja gods I didn't end up with hay.

When I saw that my tent was rH42 on day two I had to act.

Exhaust fan off. I put a dehumidifier set at 55% at the tent intake and a humidifier ]by the dehumidifiers intake. In theory it should blast out rH 55% air.

Now the tent is between 53% and 59%, ave. 55% just about where I want it for a 10-14 day dry.

I just checked and humidity was 66! The dehumidifier tank was full so it stopped but the humidifier kept going. I fixed it and it is stabilizing but I have to keep an eye on that.

It's not the cannatrol effect but at least your experiment helped me solve a problem! 🙏🙏🙏
I am glad that my information is helpful. It sounds as though you have sorted out a setup that can be made to behave. I would not use a dehumidifier unless controlling an exhaust fan proves inadequate, but that is something you can consider if you find that it is needed. It is also possible that an exhaust fan would be unnecessary, just opening the tent up just enough to keep the RH low enough for the humidifier to have to come on once in a while might be sufficient. Pumping humidified air into the dehumidifier is likely to just fill the dehumidifier up, if not over load it. The RH setting on the humdifier might help with this, but not unless the unit has an actual control included in the design.

Using a tent as the containment is definitely doable if you hang branches rather than needing shelves. If you grab a humidity controller, all you would need as long as the lung room is drier than your target humidity for the dry, is the humidifier controlled by the RH controller, plus some way of ensuring that RH does not get too high. The controller would turn on when RH has to go up, and turn off when the target is reached. Keep in mind here if you try this that not all humidifiers restart on their own after a "power failure". To operate a humidifier this way, you would set the humidifier at a higher setting than the target RH, that way the humidifier would turn on when the controller told it to. In my limited experience, the RH control included on humidifiers are not trustworthy, at least not without independent checking of the resultant RH in your tent, which it seems you are already doing.

If you are doing the dry at more or less room temperature, you would not need temperature control, so there may be a cheaper controller out there rather than the Inkbird I recommended, just make sure that the controller is rated for the amperage of your humidifier. Usually not a problem, but worth checking.

Anyway, keep us posted about how the dry goes. There are a lot of ways to get the job done, but starting with humidity control is a great way to do it, IMO. :cheers:
 
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