I’m reconfiguring my printing closet (~6’x6’) for a new printer and thought about enclosing the printer in a moderate sized cabinet (~2’x3’x6’ - one “shelf” of the closet) for thermal control. Since there will be inevitable opening and closing, as well as just normal infiltration of the ambient air (usu ~65F between 40-75% RH) it would seem like a good application for a Peltier dehumidifier to keep the RH in the chamber low and reduce my need to re-dry filament which has been on the machine during (inevitable) multi-day or -week downtime between projects.

  • @EmilieEvans@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    English
    110 months ago

    I have some TE modules that run at 10W or so and can cool 250mW at I think -50°C to -70°C so they can be awful.

    • @HewlettHackard@lemmy.ca
      link
      fedilink
      English
      110 months ago

      I see. You have a huge delta-T there, which is unnecessary for keeping a filament box dry.

      A couple sources say PA6 (a random moisture-sensitive filament) should be stored below 20% , or at 15% relative humidity. In a 66f/19c room temperature, that 15% RH would be a dew point of 17f/-8c according to dpcalc.org. In a 74f/23c room, 15% is a dew point of 23f/-5c; as you warm up the temperature further the dew point to achieve a particular RH increases (which is why we heat air to dry things).