H18 wrote:Pour some room temperature water with a little table salt (for electrolytes) over your cold gear before turning it on. This should help the problem.
I hope you're joking. Water and electronics don't really mix well...
We're made of 99% water and we do just fine with electronics. Pouring water (with electrolytes) on an amp is just like having SRV or Steven Segal play your amp. It's like breaking in new speakers or "burning in" your tubes for maximum mojo. Make sure you use plenty of table salt. Sea salt works too
"My" guitar luthier Said up to 70% (which is still a normal indoor climate) is Fine. I have my room always around 60%. But i still think the bigger changes are a problem, not a static humidity.
H18 wrote:Pour some room temperature water with a little table salt (for electrolytes) over your cold gear before turning it on. This should help the problem.
I hope you're joking. Water and electronics don't really mix well...
We're made of 99% water and we do just fine with electronics. Pouring water (with electrolytes) on an amp is just like having SRV or Steven Segal play your amp. It's like breaking in new speakers or "burning in" your tubes for maximum mojo. Make sure you use plenty of table salt. Sea salt works too
H18 wrote:Pour some room temperature water with a little table salt (for electrolytes) over your cold gear before turning it on. This should help the problem.
I hope you're joking. Water and electronics don't really mix well...
We're made of 99% water and we do just fine with electronics. Pouring water (with electrolytes) on an amp is just like having SRV or Steven Segal play your amp. It's like breaking in new speakers or "burning in" your tubes for maximum mojo. Make sure you use plenty of table salt. Sea salt works too
I've been told I'm way too dry for most of this forum but apparently so is H18...
univalve wrote:"My" guitar luthier Said up to 70% (which is still a normal indoor climate) is Fine. I have my room always around 60%. But i still think the bigger changes are a problem, not a static humidity.
Mine too.
While 45-55% is ideal, between 60-70% won't cause serious issues. Lower humidity is ALWAYS worse in my experience.
H18 wrote:Pour some room temperature water with a little table salt (for electrolytes) over your cold gear before turning it on. This should help the problem.
I hope you're joking. Water and electronics don't really mix well...
We're made of 99% water and we do just fine with electronics. Pouring water (with electrolytes) on an amp is just like having SRV or Steven Segal play your amp. It's like breaking in new speakers or "burning in" your tubes for maximum mojo. Make sure you use plenty of table salt. Sea salt works too
I just bought some safety salt to put on my front steps. I'll dump the remaining on my amps and then for good measure I'll steal the finest horse in the county and let the horse lick the salt covered amps so the moisture from it's tongue bathes my amps in goodness.