| Moderators: Royce Howland, Greg Downing, E.J. Peiker |
Steve Fines wrote:I remember those packets Artie recommended.
It seems that to lower humidity in your camera bag, the packet has to take a water molecule out of the air and somehow "fix" it to the packet, so it can no longer contribute to humidity.
How can a packet do this by chemical means and not become saturated?
If it was battery powered and producing H2 and O2 I suppose it would not become saturated, but that is clearly not the case here.
If it really does work then great, but I just don't see how a chemical packet could be everlasting and not need recharging or replacing.
Scott Fairbairn wrote:
I believe it works like a capacitor or reservoir, it absorbs during periods of high humidity, then releases the moisture when the humidity is lower. That way it gets around the "refreshing" that others require.
Steve Fines wrote:Scott Fairbairn wrote:
I believe it works like a capacitor or reservoir, it absorbs during periods of high humidity, then releases the moisture when the humidity is lower. That way it gets around the "refreshing" that others require.
I see.
So if one were going to be in a high humidity environment for any extended period of time these would become saturated and ineffective.
Steve Fines wrote:So if one were going to be in a high humidity environment for any extended period of time these would become saturated and ineffective.
Ken Kovak wrote:Steve Fines wrote:So if one were going to be in a high humidity environment for any extended period of time these would become saturated and ineffective.
That's exactly right! Based on their description you have about 12 hours before it becomes saturated and will need to be placed in a lower humidity environment so it can "regenerate".
Ken
signgrap wrote:Ken, So would you be able to regenerate these in an oven or air conditioned environment?
If yes I assume that it would take as long to regenerate to a dry state as it took to become saturated providing the difference in relative humidity was same.
signgrap wrote:Ken, So would you be able to regenerate these in an oven or air conditioned environment?
If yes I assume that it would take as long to regenerate to a dry state as it took to become saturated providing the difference in relative humidity was same.