Some algae is edible!
John Armstrong
----- Original Message -----
From: Roger Nulton
To: [email protected]
Sent: Friday, March 16, 2012 1:30 AM
Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: growing pains
Naw: it’s really not that that bad here, Jim. I can live with the movement
now that I know what to expect. Now up there above the frozen tundra, that may
be another story <g>.
Roger
BTW, I never watched “Frasier”. Maybe I should have before I moved up here?
From: Jim and Cheryl Martin
Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2012 8:02 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: growing pains
Hi Roger.
Roger that on humidity. It's much more damaging than temperature shifts in
our more humid climes.
I now run a dehumidifier next to the layout during the summer months, even
though it's an electricity hog. I've been doing so ever since I took a plastic
freight car out of its box after one particularly humid summer, and found the
axles rusty and algae blooms on the boxcar sides. I do not recommend algae as
a weathering medium.
BTW, was Frasier Crane correct? Is mildew Washington's state flower?
Cheers
Jim Martin
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Roger Nulton <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2012 3:08:09 PM
Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: growing pains
In my finished basement here in the Northwest, the problem of benchwork
movement is not from temperature change: that only fluctuates a few degrees.
But the relative humidity moves from the 30’s in the Winter, when the furnace
is heating the basement, to the 70’s – 90’s when the furnace is run
infrequently in the warmer months.
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