My bad, I thought the idea was constant heat.
PR, heat sources have to be controllable. It'd be hard to control the temp of the air from a ballast.
My bad, I thought the idea was constant heat.
"I smoke two joints before I smoke two joints then I smoke two more!"
no worries!
A bud dryer should provide a steady through-airflow, limited to 29C.
delta-9 THC begins to break down into non-psychoactives or less desirable psychoactive cannabinoids like cannabidiol (CBD) and cannabidinol (CNB) with exposure to heat above 29C.
Similar effect with exposure to light, so the dryer should be in a dark space if made from translucent materials, or simply be lightproof.
I'm looking wistfully at the baked beans tins in the recycling. We in Aus don't get the nice big coffee cans you get in the USA, so my creativity with a light bulb based heater is gonna be limited!
I DO have a 4 litre olive oil tin that I could mount a light socket in and a muffin fan on. *rubbing hands* I'll MacGuyver this yet.![]()
You do however get large cans of tomatoes, artichiokes and tomato sauce. Restaurants need bulk cans to keep cost down. I guarantee you local pizza place is recycling those big cans.
"I smoke two joints before I smoke two joints then I smoke two more!"
There's a thought.Thanks.
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So it looks like my light bulb idea wasn't a waste on bandwidth after all!
OK 100 watt incandescent light inside a coffee tin and hooked to a dimmer.
You adjust the dimmer to get the temperature you want.
Put one of those radio temperature gauges in the dryer and you should be set to go!
Semper in excretia, solon profundum variat!
Well i'll be a rat's ass,Howdy Al.
I wasnt sure if you ventured out into no mans land in the rest of the forum but im glad ya made it to see your orphaned child in develpment.
I wasnt sure if the green light was a big negative for drying but i thought i was safe,see what happend when you let kid's run loose!
Seriously though i would like to have a better soultion to the heat aspect of the dryers than just a light bulb,if you come up with something please let us know.
My 4 day $40 bud dryer,http://www.rollitup.org/grow-room-de...ml#post2087235My DIY $3 Carbon filter,http://www.rollitup.org/grow-room-de...on-filter.html
No, not a waste at all. Heat's heat and incandescent light bulbs are cheap as chips.
What's the biggest incandescent you can get as a supermarket? If you can get a 150, that'd be better yet. Whatever the biggest is that fits in an Edison screw (USA) or bayonet type lamp socket (as in Aus).OK 100 watt incandescent light inside a coffee tin and hooked to a dimmer.
That's one way to do it, but the temp won't be regulated. The air temp through the dryer will be dependent upon the intake air temp. If you set your dimmer to get a 29C airstream when the intake air temp is 20C, you can expect the airstream temp to be 5C higher (34C) if the intake air jumps up to 25C.You adjust the dimmer to get the temperature you want.
Use a thermostat to switch the lamp on & off when temp hits 29C, let the fan/s run all the time.
Use a fan motor speed controller (MSC) to slow the fan/s down if they're too noisy. A bud dryer doesn't need to be a wind tunnel. MSCs are on the shelf next to dimmers in electrical at your local hdwe store. MSCs are NOT the same as a dimmer- a fan motor will NOT run on a dimmer!
...radio temperature gauge? Can't say I've seen one of those. My radio never seems to boil over, haven't needed one yet. Good to know they are around if it ever does.Put one of those radio temperature gauges in the dryer and you should be set to go!
I prefer an indoor/outdoor thermometer, with peak memory if possible. These will have a remotely mountable temp sensor for the outdoor reading. Put that sensor in the warm airstream.
The coffee tin is going to need some help moving its heat into the air stream. My first thought is to increase the surface area of the coffee can by adding some fins.
Fins could be made out of 1/4 diameter sections of another coffee can or two. The semicircular fins could be fixed to the coffee can with pop-rivets, The pop-rivet gun would be used from inside the coffee can so the fins can overlap.
Then it could be put inside a piece of metal duct tubing:
I happen to have a very clever can opener. Part of the can's rim bead remains on the lid when the lid comes off, so the it fits neatly back on the can if you want. A socket could be fitted to the coffee can lid by cutting a round hole in it.
Other ideas? Fire away.
I'm so glad you didn't say 'well, I'll be fucked!' I'm real sensitive about my name, you know, so thanks for not taking the piss.
I don't, usually. I just happened to notice a cannon about to get loose, reckoned I otta say sumpin'. )I wasnt sure if you ventured out into no mans land in the rest of the forum but im glad ya made it to see your orphaned child in develpment.
'fraid it is. You'd have been disappointed in potency. 'sokay, we'll fix it.I wasnt sure if the green light was a big negative for drying but i thought i was safe,see what happend when you let kid's run loose!
The thing is that low power heat sources are actually pretty hard to come by! Heating elements usually are hundreds to thousands of watts. We need around 100W for this job.Seriously though i would like to have a better soultion to the heat aspect of the dryers than just a light bulb,if you come up with something please let us know.
Incandescent light bulbs make shitloads of heat, run on mains AC voltage and are cheap and readily available. Downside is they emit light, which we know is bad for da budz.
I did do an alternative design which uses a soldering iron heating element. Could be 25-60-100W, whatever you can get. Soldering irons are not designed to heat air, so you need to increase their surface area. I reckoned that if you pinched a sheet of aluminum around a soldering iron, fixed it in place with nuts & bolts or pop rivets, then rolled it into a spiral and stuck it in a piece of duct, you'd have a pretty good air warmer that you could control easily with an incandescent light dimmer.
Last edited by Al B. Fuct; 05-10-2008 at 10:53 PM. Reason: heh
AlBFuct;
To increase the surface for the coffee tin by adding fins, how about we replace the coffee tin with a Class B Rain Cap such as the one shown in the attached image. Its aluminum so it will dissipate the heat evenly and quickly and the fins are already cut. They run about $8 at Menards if my memory serves me correctly.
Semper in excretia, solon profundum variat!
Hey, that looks like it's got some potential! Menards is a bit of a commute for me, but someone in the USA will surely try out one of these vent pipe caps. Just got to work out how to keep all the light inside of it.
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