Have. Any of you made your own box or smallish humidor?
Echambers
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....if so, I'd like to talk with you. Post here or PM perhaps? I'm looking to build either a 300ish box humidor or a small (under 500) cabinet humidor .
-- "There's something that doesn't make sense. Let's go poke it with a stick."
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. First some background. I think In three years I will be building a house. My intention is to build a well ventilated smoking room with a large built in humidor (much like yours Walt) so I just need something to get me through the next three years. I'm leaning towards mahogany with a. Spanish ceder lining and drawers. I've chosen mahogany for its looks but also because of the hardwoods it has some similar properties to Spanish ceder (but see below too)
I've read a lot of about the debate between solid wood and mdf with veneer. Normally I wouldn't even consider mdf but most of what I read suggested that mdf is better at dealing with the humidity than most real wood. Of. course I'm only looking to get three or four years out of it so maybe it doesn't matter
If I choose a cabinet design I am most concered with the seal. How did you ensure a tight seek Walt?
Thoughts so far? Anything I need to be thinking about?
For your door/drawer seals, simple weatherstripping should suffice. Easily obtainable from Lowes/Home Depot, etc. I use an acitve humidification system, so I do worry too much about if it's airtight. If it loses some, the electronics kick in and add more moisture. Before I was completely done sealing the doors, it would take a water refill every 4 days. After the seal I refill once every 8 days or more. I open them sliding doors at least once a day. Sometimes 2 or 3 times a day. For a passive system, the seal will be much more important.
one thought though is that if you have two different woods right next to each other with a relatively solid coat of glue acting as a moisture barrier then you have two different materials that expand at a different rate attached together. this could cause warping issues if one expands much more than the other. this can be overcome by having a heavy varnish on both the inside and outside of the exterior wood creating the moisture barrier, then having the spanish cedar as a lining on the inside.
you can see in some desktop humidors that the cedar isnt even attached to the humidor. this is not a problem. its to account for the expansion.
some B&M walk-ins will actually use a plastic vapor seal between the cedar and the exterior walls of the humidor.
if building a walk-in that would be how i would go.
if using solid wood there needs to be some sort of seal on the outside of the wood. the spanish cedar does in fact accept moisture well and this also means that it will go right through it. that heavy varnish on a solid spanish cedar humidor isnt just for looks, it is functional as well.
He lined the inside of the closet with a tub/shower liner material and then installed his cedar.
It made sense. Cause the moisture could get past the cedar into the structure. Especially if you already live in a damp climate.
I wish I could find the article again.
Money can't buy happiness, but it can buy cigars and that's close enough.