Al B. Fuct
once had a dog named
Thanks for the linkage, silk.
One thing I notice from all those commercial dehydrators is how much heating power they have - anywhere from 220W to 600W. Lots of watts, probably very good for making beef jerky. However, I seriously doubt any of the commercial units will be adjustable down to 29C, which is the very maximum temp you want to expose buds to while drying or storing. Throwing 600W into a load of buds would very quickly destroy the THC and turn the buds crumbly.
My dryer only puts 25W worth of power at maximum (more than that should pop the resistors) into the air which runs through the buds. When ambient temperature is about 24C, it only takes about 10-15W to raise the temp to 29C.
I had considered modifying a commercial dehydration unit by putting a high-power incandescent dimmer unit in series with the heating element to limit the max temp, but the cost to buy a new dehydrator unit was far, FAR in excess of what I could build one for.
One thing I notice from all those commercial dehydrators is how much heating power they have - anywhere from 220W to 600W. Lots of watts, probably very good for making beef jerky. However, I seriously doubt any of the commercial units will be adjustable down to 29C, which is the very maximum temp you want to expose buds to while drying or storing. Throwing 600W into a load of buds would very quickly destroy the THC and turn the buds crumbly.
My dryer only puts 25W worth of power at maximum (more than that should pop the resistors) into the air which runs through the buds. When ambient temperature is about 24C, it only takes about 10-15W to raise the temp to 29C.
I had considered modifying a commercial dehydration unit by putting a high-power incandescent dimmer unit in series with the heating element to limit the max temp, but the cost to buy a new dehydrator unit was far, FAR in excess of what I could build one for.