Title says it all. I have a bit of experience w/batts, power, electronics and water. Usually, all the above mixed together.
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MMMmmm. Not so much. But glad to have you on the forum contributing.I know this is a long explanation and I hope you stayed with me. I'd love to hear if you find this useful.
MMMmmm. Not so much. But glad to have you on the forum contributing.
So, throw it in a shoe box with a hair dryer?TL;DR issue?
Short version, if you need to dry electronics: put it in a container, heat the container to 120F and blow air over the top. That will beat all other methods by a long shot.
Welcome and glad you joined.Title says it all. I have a bit of experience w/batts, power, electronics and water. Usually, all the above mixed together.
Seen some guy Put something in a box and poke a hole in it and point a hairdryer in and leave it for a few hours. I imagine airflow is a priority over heat. We used to dry atties using a pc fan or home aircleaner or ac/heating vent.Welcome @PapaBear I actually have a piece of electronics that I deeply want to be sure dries out completely and it's been sitting a few days but I'd love for it to be dryer! I really like this thing and cannot replace it. I've gutted it as far as I can.
Can you please phrase for me your method in language useful for clumsy idiots? It sounds interesting from what I can tell. I don't necessarily need a "why" it works, I'm gonna assume based on what you are saying, this works. (I also have little to lose at this point). I need like a how to and yeah probably using household items LIKE a blowdryer, etc. and also "how long". Etc.
Also, welcome to ECF.
Anna
I'm just a simple unfrozen caveman vaper, but I seem to have heard that water evaporates more quickly when air is cold. If the rice doesn't work, which I have heard previous to this thread, mayhapst I would set something wet in front of my air conditioner, which also removes humidity from the air.
Heat may work better to get the moisture OUT of the device though.