591 Posts

April 10th, 2007 19:00

Moisture and computers are like vinager and oil, they don't mix.  My advice is to keep it as dry as possible and ck to see if condensation/sweat builds up inside/outside the computer.  I can assure you if this happens the computer will not last very long.  May want to have an external fan placed where it continuiously blows on the computer.


Message Edited by Uncle Ripper on 04-10-2007 04:58 PM

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1.1K Posts

April 10th, 2007 22:00

umm, last time I checked, condensation builds up on surfaces where warm moist air hits a colder surface.  I think you will be okay since your computer is definetly not a refrigerator.
 
 
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41 Posts

April 10th, 2007 23:00

I've got three systems in my not-so-dry basement (with de-humidifier). With an appropriately-sized & correctly functioning dehumidifier, you won't have a problem - unless you are talking about _standing_ water, or some obscene level of atmospheric moisture.

RE: "hot machine" Once powered down, electronic devices become cool. In a cool, damp basement, anything metal has a good chance of being cooler than the ambient air temperature - making condensation possible. There might be a very limited effect - but still not a desirable situation for electronics.

RE: "as dry as possible" - you can be too dry - which is exactly what happens in New England (and elsewhere) in the winter when the atmospheric moisture is locked up in the frozen ground. Then you have to be careful about static discharge. In winter I strictly avoid opening the system case unless there is a dire emergency - and then I use a real static protection.
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