I just had some fun dehumidifying Jim's DeLorean. This is really a letter to Jim, but I'm sure some of you are interested in what happens to DeLoreans that are parked outside. What happens? Humidity! We just got one of these winter-from-hell rains that lasted two days. I walk out to check the car and find a layer of moisture clinging inside the windshield. I dried off all the water and found a little water under the drivers side carpet as well as the whole interior feeling damp. So I used several towels to dry out what I could. Now I have trays of Damp-Rid sitting in there to keep the air dry. I suppose that the water got in through the doors someway. But in Florida even tight cars will accumulate lots of moisture inside. At my earliest convenience I'll try to make room in a garage stall for it which could be as early as two weeks or as late as never considering how I get things done. For those of you who don't know what a winter-from-hell rain is, here's what happens: The weather stays cold long enough for every non-air-conditioned part of the house to get thoroughly cold. Then it rains. For those of you into physics, rain is condensation in the air, and this is an exothermic process -- meaning that it significantly warms the air. Now we have cold objects surrounded by warm damp air and everything -- and I mean EVERYTHING gets wet. I have water dripping from my walls, windows, door handles, etc. It's just like watching a cold softdrink accumulate water only this is my house! Walt To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: DMCForum-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
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