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MrMid | 3 years ago
The only problem we have is humidity. With everyday use, a lot of condensed water gets stuck inside, the humidity goes near 100 % and the moulds really like that.
We tried many things, including making a drain hole inside, but nothing helped. We "solved" it with putting 1 kg of adsorbent (silica gel) on the bottom. It lasts about two months between regenerations, so it is quite usable this way.
js2|3 years ago
https://evadry.wpengine.com/product/e-500-renewable-high-cap...
It's basically just a silica gel pack, but you can plug it in when it's saturated to recharge it, and it has a wet/dry indicator.
HPsquared|3 years ago
Don't chest fridges have a similar mechanism? Perhaps the problem is things being too closely-packed, so the air can't circulate - so that when the lid is opened and water vapour let in from outside, it condenses on the food etc - but this isn't then removed by the mechanism above.
MrMid|3 years ago
It was designed as a freezer, not a fridge, after all.
Slartie|3 years ago
Now THIS is a great idea! I have the same thing (converted old freezer to chest fridge with custom IoT temperature-controlled plug switch magic; though I now replaced it with a chest freezer that was actually designed with a thermostat allowing temperatures over 0 degrees celsius) and the same exact problem with the moisture accumulating at the bottom. The device actually has a hole to let the water out, but that's not helping as there must be a huge puddle of water before it even starts reaching the drain in one of the edges of the machine.
I might try that adsorbent trick, though I would imagine that I'd have to add some kind of grating on top of the adsorbent? Because I'd rather not want to place my water bottles into the adsorbent and have it stick to the bottom of the bottles.
devenson|3 years ago
The wick will act like a self-priming siphon, and carry (wick) the water out the hole and drip from the lowest point of the wick.
jrs235|3 years ago
r2_pilot|3 years ago
js2|3 years ago
https://www.amazon.com/Improved-Eva-dry-333-Renewable-Dehumi...
https://evadry.wpengine.com/product/e-500-renewable-high-cap...
MrMid|3 years ago
But the winter is coming now, so the extra heat generated when regenerating won't go to waste.
RosanaAnaDana|3 years ago
Scoundreller|3 years ago
Then toss it every few months. Mold won’t grow on the salt itself, so could cook with it.
Or use it as driveway deicer.
Or just but the 10kg bags of rock salt in winter for driveway deicer for like $5.
MrMid|3 years ago
RosanaAnaDana|3 years ago