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^ ThisIWinchester wrote:I like em around 65 all year round.
Since humidity is relative to temperature, how warm are your sticks in winter? There's some conversion for moisture volume/weight in air at different temps. The same would obviously apply to in tobacco. The overall moisture content may not change despite your increase of rH percentage.Zedman05 wrote:Because of the lack in humidity here in the fall/winter/spring, I actually go the other way. I plug in my electronic device to help add humidity to my cigars faster since the winedor I use for regular smokes gets opened more. I bump up the humidity from 65 to 66ish. My thoughts are that when I smoke, I will be smoking in an environment with less humidity, so lets bring it up to help with the continuing depletion. I know, it might be stupid, but hey, it hasn't failed now.
Maybe you should try leaving your cigars at a lower humidity in the first place all year round, Hoosier.
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The garage being your smoking spot is the thing I didn't factor. You are obviously correct if your temp is not lower. I'm speaking to when it's used in the generalization from Hoosier above.Zedman05 wrote:As temp goes down, relative humidity goes up. I work with this fact on a daily basis, so thinking in this manor, I increase the humidity ever so slightly to negate the ambient loss. If I smoked cigars in my house, where there is humidified air, I would not change a thing, but my garage (where I smoke 99% of my cigars) is ambient humidity to start. I then heat the garage, thus bringing the humidity to a low spot at the new temperature. My thoughts have always been; as long as my temp stays consistant at around 70ish, then the higher humidity in the cigar will not start to turn to steam, it would only do that if the temp was lowered a lot.
If I were to take my cigars and smoke them outside in the winter, sure, I would never increase their humidity.