Store optical discs in room with dehumidifier?
the air dehumidifier device with compressor used in the room is good for long-term storage of DVD and MDISC optical media?
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Yes, dehumifiers help. That's what is done at various libraries and archival facilities. However, be sure to select the proper level of humidity, not enough humidity can be as damaging as too much humidity. |
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Here are pictures of the dehumidifier that uses a compressor and Green gas is good or bad for CD and DVD and electronic devices?contains options 40, 50, 60% |
I'm not a dehumidifier expert, but those seem good to me. At very least, I'd assume a competent unit for a small/home space. That appears to be not too small, not too large.
For something like this, I'd read up on dehumidifier models at Consumer Reports. |
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To conserve CD and DVD optical discs The dehumidifier is good because it reduces and controls humidity, but it increases the temperature of the environment by 2 or 3 degrees, will this temperature increase harm the conservation of optical discs and also electronic devices? without the dehumidifier here where I live the temperature varies from 30 to 35ºC |
Then also buy an air conditioner.
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I have to choose between dehumidifier or air conditioner because both are expensive and consume a lot of energy I also can't break the wall to install the air conditioner What do you recommend me? I'm confused but I thought about the dehumidifier but it increases 2 or 3 degrees of temperature it makes a lot of difference in the conservation of the DVD and electronics portable air conditioning also has a very large size and does not have a reservoir |
For small spaces, portable air conditioners are about $275.
I actually looked into this, for cooling an outdoor workshop, during the hottest spring/fall days. (Summer is way too hot to even bother out there, unless at night.) Still a thought, 2021 expense. |
my room measures 37m3 is not completely closed, the air conditioning has a large size to put in the room the dehumidifier measures 56x37x26 with the air conditioner does not have a reservoir
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What is the recommendation? Is it true or false that dehumidifying devices are used in filing rooms even though they know that dehumidifiers can increase the room temperature by 2 or 3 degrees |
The dehumidifier used in a filing room is not in the filing room. It is part of the centralized HVAC system. The filing room will be the same temperature as the other rooms.
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the room temperature without the dehumidifier is 29-32 degrees with high humidity with the dehumidifier the temperature has an increase of 2 to 3 degrees and low humidity, is this good for filing?
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What color is the dehumidifier?
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Plus 300 degrees.
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no, 300 plus is model name
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This thread gave me some early morning chuckles. :laugh:
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Read about humidifiers at archivist and librarian sites. Most probably just discuss RH% and temps, and that's what you need to know. The humidifiers in archive facilities will not be *in* the room, but rather built in, so that heat generation is vented outside. This is no different than A/C at broadcast video facilities, or datacenters. You don't vent heat into the same room being cooled. A de-humidifier will be part of A/C aka HVAC, as you don't want to vent cold air back out. That said, I've had humidifiers / dehumidifiers in my home. But I also have A/C and heat regulation. |
In filing rooms do they use these dehumidifiers similar to my device?
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That exact device is used in the Library of Congress to store the original Declaration of Independence.
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Is putting the dehumidifier to keep humidity at 60% good for long life of DVD optical discs? Is 60% RH good for DVD optical discs?
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