Thank you for this information. My humidity is at 70-78 and temp is 80-82, I have an empty wine cooler that I could set a little lower than 80 to start and then gradually lower it to 70, that would be my best option, right? As to the humidity, I guess that will come down over time if I don't add any water , right? At one point in time without adding water I assume that humidity will drop to controllable levels.
Another problem is those freakin meters, they are all over the place, my digital reads a higher degree of humidity than the mechanical one.
I welcome anyone's feedback
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Yeah... 70 to 78 is RH is too high (you'll know this because they won't burn well).
The wine cooler will work, but just make sure it's a thermoelectric one (just google the model to find out).
To lower the humidty, you can remove any water or humidity adding elements you are using, but if the ambient humidity is higher than what you are looking for, it won't help. Again, dry HF beads will help remove the humidity. What helps a lot in removing humidity is adding some cedar. Dry cedar will suck up moisture like a sponge (up until it gets saturated/seasoned of course).
As for the meters... the mechanical ones are pretty much useless. Get a couple of digital ones (I see you already have one). Measuring humidity is a very difficult thing to do correctly... as such, the equipment has to be constantly calibrated (I calibrate mine every few months... just google how to do that). If you haven't calibrated them, then you can't rely on them at all... they can get quite a bit off.
In the end, with HF beads and a properly sealed humi in a constant temp, I've noticed that the beads are actually a good measure of humidity instead of the meters! For example, if my meter starts reading higher or lower than what I regularly see, I calibrate the meter instead of add/remove humidity... more often then not, the meter is off as opposed to the HF beads not doing their job.
To add humidity, I spray some distilled water to the HF beads.
To remove humidity, I add some cedar wood that has been sitting out (read: dried).
The more cigars you have in the humi, the more stable it will get.