• Friends, our 2nd Amendment rights are always under attack and the NRA has been a constant for decades in helping fight that fight.

    We have partnered with the NRA to offer you a discount on membership and Muzzleloading Forum gets a small percentage too of each membership, so you are supporting both the NRA and us.

    Use this link to sign up please; https://membership.nra.org/recruiters/join/XR045103

Update to previous Muzzleloader Storage thread...

Muzzleloading Forum

Help Support Muzzleloading Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
They also make one that you can check that will give you the max and min of both temp and humidity.
 
woodse guy said:
They also make one that you can check that will give you the max and min of both temp and humidity.
This Meade Weather Station has a number of features like that...I just haven't used them yet because all that is handled by the master unit.
The system actually did come as a typical master/remote, I just haven't used it that way as I didn't know if the remote signal would penetrate the safe walls...plus I initially wanted to see first hand what was going on inside the safe every day as a confidence factor.
:hmm: Now just talking about it has me thinking with several months of stand-alone data I need to test the master/remote and see if the signals can make it out of the safe...
 
roundball said:
Now just talking about it has me thinking with several months of stand-alone data I need to test the master/remote and see if the signals can make it out of the safe...

Just tested, no dice...as I suspected the remote sensor signal can't get out of the steel safe
 
So that I understand... Constantly opening the door safe to check readings.... Would there not be a air exchange, effectively changing the readings of humidity, going forward?

Wouldn't the garages current air cindition of relative humidity....effect the safes inside humidity...each time the door was opened?
 
Since I can not, perhaps someone could recommend that Roundball used one of the hard-wired units instead of a wireless unit. They are often cheaper and very reliable.

Enjoy, J.D.
 
jdkerstetter said:
Since I can not, perhaps someone could recommend that Roundball used one of the hard-wired units instead of a wireless unit. They are often cheaper and very reliable.

Enjoy, J.D.
But then he'd have to use one of the holes in the floor plate made for access, :idunno:
 
Thanks necchi.

It could be run out the provided hole for the dehumidifer cord/light cord. The wires on these units are so thin that it wouldn't be problem. Most of these safes doors don't "seal" either...there is usually a little "play" in the door, so running it through the door jam is often an option. The indiviual safe owner would have to be the judge of that.

Enjoy, J.D.
 
The (four)I use are Eva-Dry High Capacity dehumidifier units bought at Cabelas for around $35.00 each. They have a plastic case and a clear plastic window area to view the Selica Gel. The gel is blue when dry and pink when it has adsorbed moisture. I like these units because I can remove one or two at a time and just plug them into a 120V outlet for a few hours until they indicate blue. I also like that I have four so that I am never without some protection. I have a large safe and place two on the top shelf and two on the floor. I too have sealed all the holes and gasketed the door. I only have to recharge them a few times each summer - but I keep them in the safe year round. Great capacity and protection for only $120.00. I check on them at least once a week as I shoot quite a bit. Strawstalker/Co.
 
Sounds like a good set-up...I got more than was advertised as needed for my square footage just to have plenty of margin.
Years ago we got a portable electric oven for extra oven space at family holiday meals, never needed it so it's now the official drier. Set it outside at 300* for 3 hours to keep from throwing heat into the air conditioned house, stick the Dry-Packs back in the safe.
Right now it's 98% outside, 76% in the garage, 46% in the house, 43% in the safe.
Drying the canisters right now for only the 2nd time.
 
Take apart the sending unit and find the antenna and connect a wire to that. either stick that wire out through the door seal or connect it to the metal of the safe to make it the antenna.
 
Link
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0028M7WK4/ref=oh_details_o05_s01_i00


Above gel foil lined carboard box.
There are 3 indicators blue/orange for 50,40,30% when the middle one (40) changes colors then you are supposed to recharge. In my safe that takes about 5 months to need recharging.

Medium size sixteen gun safe (that actually holds about ten) StackON 59" x 21" x 20".

Amazon: "900 Gram Silica Gel for 66 Cubic Feet"
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I saw an awesome homemade gun case made out of a soda vending machine. A lot of effort went into making it and was extremely roomy. What he did is build in an electric dehumidifier with a drain to the outside.
 
Back
Top