Posted by Steve | Posted in Mold Making | Posted on 03-06-2010
Tags: mold making terms

Can you feel moisture in the air?
How do you know if there is to much in the air? What affects does it have on you? And how do you get rid of it? Any information about this will help. Except, I dont care about mold and mildew, I already know about that part. When I ask what affects it can have on you, I am talking about short term affects? Like how can it make you uncomfortable?
The reason we perspire is to cool off our bodies in the heat. Otherwise we’d have a heat stroke. The moisture cools as it evaporates, bringing the temperature down.
When it gets really humid, the moisture in the air and your perspiration doesn’t evaporate with any efficiency, so 90 degrees with high humidity can feel like 115 degrees in a dry environment and you get drenched from sweat very quickly, and at lower temperatures.
This is why you hear people from Las Vegas say “well, it’s a dry heat” as they swelter in 120 degrees. Because the air is dry, it actually feels cooler than a lower temp in high humidity.
Home Canning Basics – Part 2- Two Types of Canners
|
|
Audel’s ship fitters’ guide a practical treatise on steel ship building and repairing, with instruction in mold loft work, lifting, duplicating, including template making, plan reading, parts of a steel ship, terms and definitiions, developing plates and . 1 $34.95 This book, “Audel’s ship fitters’ guide a practical treatise on steel ship building and repairing, with instruction in mold loft work, lifting, duplicating, including template making, plan reading, parts of a steel ship, terms and definitiions, developing plates and . 1″, by Ralph Newstead, is a replication of a book originally published before 1919. It has been restored by human beings, page by p… |
