Humidor Help
Comments
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Hi @MrSpacely and welcome to the forum. So many things can be going wrong. I would start with making a few changes and to see if those changes make a difference. I'm not familiar with the digital hydrometer you are using but did you do a salt water test on it to see how accurate it is before putting in your humidor? After you check that, put it in a zip lock bag with the Bovida packs and see where the humidity is. If its at 72% it might be the humidor (doesn't seal very well which is the case of most cheap humidors). You can also search the forum and you will get a ton of info on this subject

Better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak out and remove all doubt— Abraham Lincoln2 -
I am assuming that you seasoned the humidor. After I have seasoned I put in 1 or 2 plastic gel holders and check the levels. I usually add 2 69RH Bovidas and the reading is usually on the mark. I would not stack the Bovidas, rather spread them around.5
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Im going to second the opinion of re-seasoning the humidor. Since you are already using Bovedas get a seasoning Boveda packet from them, drop it in the humidor and let the humidor sit for 2 weeks. During that time keep your cigars and a boveda pack or two in a tupperware or ziplock bag during the two weeks and that will keep them in good condition. After the two weeks are up your humidor should be working well again and you can stick your cigars back in. Make sure you are also using a calibrated digital hygrometer as well for accuracy!"When walking in open territory bother no one. If someone bothers you, ask them to stop. If they do not stop, destroy them."5
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Here's one method to ease you're problem. There are plenty of other ways but this this might be the easiest "fix" you'll find. Take your cigars out and bag them along with one of those bovedas in a ziplock. Find a seal-able plastic container large enough to hold your humidor inside it. A small cooler or a large rubbermaid container etc. Re-season your humidor inside the container using a sponge with distilled water and any extra bovedas you have. Then after you have the humidor re-seasoned and you put your cigars back in, keep the humidor inside the container full time. It ain't pretty, but it works.
(Oh yeah,........ First, things first, make sure you're hygrometer is accurate before you go to any trouble fixing your humidor.)
P.S. Those 72% Bovedas are too humid in my opinion. They need to be changed to 65% or 69% when you get things running properly.
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I use the same hygrometers he's using they are Western Caliber IV. They are insanely accurate even right out of the box, but still put the hygrometer in a small ziplock bag with one of those 72 Boveda to be sure. It should read 72-74RH. Iv'e found some of the 72 Boveda I have to get to 74-75RH but the 65's I also have stay around 64-66RH when testing them. As others already said re season your humidor.If you quote me do the @TX98Z28 in your text or I won't be notified of your quote, Thanks.1
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I agree wholeheartedly with @Bob_Luken (2Bs) about the Bovedas, I use 69RH in all my humidors. As far as I am concerned the digital hydrometers are the only way to go. Thank you @90+_Irishman, who posted a photo years ago (it seems) of his set up.
When I set up my Escalade I got an electronic hydrometer and it has stayed at 68.5RH since I installed it. I seasoned it and let it sit for 48 hrs and then added the hydrometer, again I let it sit for 48 hrs. There are no Bovedas. It is a big humidor and the Cigar Oasis Excel only has to be filled with distilled water about every three months. I use this box for aging only.
You will absolutely with out doubt I will bet on it soon be looking for a bigger humidor.1 -
I agree it sounds like your humidor needs seasoning. You certainly have enough bovidas for that humi. I use the same hygrometer myself and it's off by 3 percent so make sure you do a salt test.0







