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Accessory Discussion / Reviews>Humidor Issues
sleeved613 08:35 AM 06-21-2016
Good Morning, Asylum -

I have been having terrible issues with my humidor. I inherited one from my brother, it is a large Thompson Cigars humidor. I seasoned it, left it for 24 hours, added the Boveda pack, left it for 24 hours, added the hygrometer and cigars and it consistently hovered around 60% humidity and was rather warm. I moved it to my basement, now its cold and still at 59-60% humidity. SO, I purchased a smaller humidor, seasoned it, left it 24 hours, added Boveda and hygrometer and it is still at 60%.... What am I doing wrong?
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sleeved613 08:35 AM 06-21-2016
Correction: The new humidor is at about 54%
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icehog3 08:55 AM 06-21-2016
Is the second humidor also from Thompson's? That could be the problem right there.

Did you calibrate your hygrometer?
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dijit 09:16 AM 06-21-2016
Sounds to me like you are moving too fast. put a bowl of water with a sponge in it. Close it and leave it for 4 or 5 days. LEAVE IT DONT OPEN IT. On day 5 check your humidity. Keep in mind that at cooler temps its harder to keep higher humidities.
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AdamJoshua 10:00 AM 06-21-2016
I endorse both comments here. I would calibrate your hygrometer (there are many threads on here how to do that), put your sticks in a tupperware type container for now, and as Mike said season your humidors for at least 5 days, 1 or 2 days isn't really going to cut it.

Best of luck!
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OLS 02:17 PM 06-21-2016
Or just say "FINALLY, I have em just the way the Brits like em!" and be happy with your success. You are almost
never going to find a humidor from a cigar discounter that will serve as a long term, stable home for cigars. So why
do they sell em by the thousands every month? Because everyone has to learn the hard way. The good thing about
that is that a crappy humidor keeps cigars about as well as a ziplock bag or tupperware box. So in the end, if you smoke
a lot, hell, just upgrade to a downgrade and enjoy the smoking, not the worry.
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CigarNut 03:14 PM 06-21-2016
Originally Posted by sleeved613:
Good Morning, Asylum -

I have been having terrible issues with my humidor. I inherited one from my brother, it is a large Thompson Cigars humidor. I seasoned it, left it for 24 hours, added the Boveda pack, left it for 24 hours, added the hygrometer and cigars and it consistently hovered around 60% humidity and was rather warm. I moved it to my basement, now its cold and still at 59-60% humidity. SO, I purchased a smaller humidor, seasoned it, left it 24 hours, added Boveda and hygrometer and it is still at 60%.... What am I doing wrong?
You should check out this thread: http://www.cigarasylum.com/vb/showthread.php?t=620

As others have explained, it takes more time to properly season a humidor.

Also, you get what you pay for, so inexpensive humidor so tend to be leaky, so they take more effort to maintain.
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mosesbotbol 07:00 AM 06-22-2016
Balancing humidity can take weeks. Be patient and don't overdue the attempts to humidify. Cigars and wood can only accept so much humidity at a time. You'll risk mold or beetles going too aggressive.
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sleeved613 10:08 AM 06-22-2016
Thank you, everyone, for your suggestions. I will keep you updated on my progress.
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Emjaysmash 11:14 AM 06-22-2016
The aforementioned Thompson humi was always a solid seal when I used it. Then again, this has been out of use for a few years, so it may be leaky until properly seasoned.
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Weelok 01:22 AM 06-23-2016
I will post links to a few videos that you may find helpful as I tend to like videos.

http://www.stogiereview.com/2006/10/...umidor-part-1/

http://www.stogiereview.com/2006/11/...umidor-part-2/

Now as for checking out your humidor, you can check the seal with the dollar bill test. You can google it but basically close the lid on a dollar bill and it should have resistance to pulling it out. Check all four sides.

Now I am a bit puzzled on your humidity element. Boveda has a lot of products but if your using a pack, you might want to consider something like this:

http://www.heartfeltindustries.com/p...p?prod=AH_1_70
Which is the small humidifier.

One of the benefits to the beads is if they go dry quickly, it's another check that your humidor is dry and quickly is going to be subjective but you shouldn't have to recharge it but once every two weeks.

Finally, and this is important, the less air you have to provide humidity for, the easier it is to stay consistent so hit up cigar bid and curse my name forever more.
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Weelok 01:46 AM 06-23-2016
And I would be remiss if I didn't mention that you can opt to do a tupperdor.

http://www.stogiefresh.info/edu-humi...-your-own.html

Note, no moisture escapes so go with beads or Boveda.
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CigarNut 10:00 AM 06-23-2016
Originally Posted by Weelok:
I will post links to a few videos that you may find helpful as I tend to like videos.

http://www.stogiereview.com/2006/10/...umidor-part-1/

http://www.stogiereview.com/2006/11/...umidor-part-2/

Now as for checking out your humidor, you can check the seal with the dollar bill test. You can google it but basically close the lid on a dollar bill and it should have resistance to pulling it out. Check all four sides.

Now I am a bit puzzled on your humidity element. Boveda has a lot of products but if your using a pack, you might want to consider something like this:

http://www.heartfeltindustries.com/p...p?prod=AH_1_70
Which is the small humidifier.

One of the benefits to the beads is if they go dry quickly, it's another check that your humidor is dry and quickly is going to be subjective but you shouldn't have to recharge it but once every two weeks.

Finally, and this is imporrtant, the less air you have to provide humidity for, the easier it is to stay consistent so hit up cigar bid and curse my name forever more.
I disagree with this -- a little -- all humidification devices require some air flow to be effective. If your the RH in your humidor is good and you don't mess with it (add or remove cigars, or open it up much) then less air flow is OK. However, if your RH is not where you want it, or you add and remove cigars frequently, then some air flow will help your humidor stabilize more quickly.

Also, the larger the humidor, the more air flow you need.

Just my :-)
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