I would like to add that humidity % is directly connected to the temperature of the air, which is why it’s called relative humidity. When the temperature of the air increases, the humidity percentage seems to decrease because the air can hold more water when it is warmer. However, there is still the same amount of water in the air, the percentage has simply decreased because the air has a greater capacity of moisture. Hope this helps people understand :)
the humidity you are referring to after a couple minutes is the humidity of the air inside, NOT the dryness of the filament. If it is wet, it will continue to dry for a long time. Turn the heat off after 2 minutes and you'll see the humidity rise. That will happen until you actually dehumidify the actual filament.
Yeah, you're right, but there's no reasonable way to cheaply or easily scope the total dampness of the filament. I was just showcasing that it can create a dry environment rather quickly.
I picked up the 2 roll version off of AliExpress which also has desiccant slots. Funny yours hit 15% as did mine and never went lower, is that a threshold it can’t pass
The box. Has to be. So not a perfect read, by any stretch. You'd just want to get the box very hot and dry and then let that run for 4-8 hours to bring the filament towards that number.
I would like to add that humidity % is directly connected to the temperature of the air, which is why it’s called relative humidity. When the temperature of the air increases, the humidity percentage seems to decrease because the air can hold more water when it is warmer. However, there is still the same amount of water in the air, the percentage has simply decreased because the air has a greater capacity of moisture. Hope this helps people understand :)
the humidity you are referring to after a couple minutes is the humidity of the air inside, NOT the dryness of the filament. If it is wet, it will continue to dry for a long time. Turn the heat off after 2 minutes and you'll see the humidity rise. That will happen until you actually dehumidify the actual filament.
Yeah, you're right, but there's no reasonable way to cheaply or easily scope the total dampness of the filament. I was just showcasing that it can create a dry environment rather quickly.
@@polarcloudA small scale on the rollers that it sits on would do the trick
I picked up the 2 roll version off of AliExpress which also has desiccant slots.
Funny yours hit 15% as did mine and never went lower, is that a threshold it can’t pass
How were you able to get the tpu to not under extruded on the a1 mini?
Print slower. I go at 50%.
Is this the humidity in the filament or in the box?
The box. Has to be. So not a perfect read, by any stretch. You'd just want to get the box very hot and dry and then let that run for 4-8 hours to bring the filament towards that number.
Can it also dry nylon cf?
No it doesn't get hot enough
"promosm"
Sunlu S4 waaaaay more better.
definitely do not recommend this dryer
Why not? It seems fine to me.
Why
Great arguments lol
@@polarcloud ua-cam.com/video/ZjCcrme_FTk/v-deo.htmlsi=xPF5wlb_YozSZS3z