Electronics Forum | Mon Jul 29 11:28:09 EDT 2002 | yngwie
Is there a difference between the Nitrogen cabinet vs Dry cabinet ? How does this helps in creating safe environment for MSD storage. I felt puzzled when my customer rejected me coz' I'm using the Nitrogen cabinet instead of dry cabinet. Except for t
Electronics Forum | Mon Jul 29 18:55:34 EDT 2002 | davef
Good question. What did your customer say?
Electronics Forum | Mon Jul 29 21:41:22 EDT 2002 | davef
Rite. Moisture, not N2, in the air is the issue.
Electronics Forum | Mon Jul 29 21:22:52 EDT 2002 | Yngwie
The customer said " The Nitrogen PPM is questionable". LIke what I said, as long as I have met the 10% RH, it should be OK, rite ? thx
Electronics Forum | Tue Jul 30 08:38:55 EDT 2002 | dasal
Truthfully, there are pro's and con's for both technologies. (put cost of ownership aside for one moment) Nitrogen won't dry humidified components as rapidly as a desiccant dry box. I'm talking about a self regenerating dry box that uses molecular s
Electronics Forum | Thu May 03 19:23:20 EDT 2007 | SWAG
We have a "McDry" cabinet. It works well.
Electronics Forum | Thu May 03 21:59:23 EDT 2007 | davef
dry and cabinet
Electronics Forum | Thu May 03 19:03:23 EDT 2007 | ruedae123
Has anyone been using low humidity dry cabinets for storing moisture sensitive devices? Any suggestion on the right equipment vendor? Thank you.
Electronics Forum | Mon May 07 15:54:22 EDT 2007 | joeherz
If you're looking for something for less than $5-10k, you should consider setting up a point-of-use air drying system. If you can supply fairly dry air from a house system to the point of use dryer, you can acheive humidty levels below 2% easily. W
Electronics Forum | Fri May 04 18:49:31 EDT 2007 | darby
We use Super Dry. The oldest ones are about 5 years old and we haven't had a problem.