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#1 |
Ain't Never Gonna Leave
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You'd probably have to seal all the glass from the inside and put seals on the doors, but if your handy it is doable!
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It might taste crummy, but at least it's huge. |
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#2 |
Have My Own Room
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#3 | |
Infecting Via PM
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#5 |
Way out there
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It's sealing ability's will be relative to how well you seal it. Make it air tight and use passive humidification or go with active if you leave leaks.Add a few Spanish cedar trays and go
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#6 | |
Ain't Never Gonna Leave
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I would think sealing the doors would be the hardest part.
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It might taste crummy, but at least it's huge. |
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#7 |
Have My Own Room
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I agree, not to sure it can be sealed without some internal wood work.
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#8 |
Bilge Rat
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I'm thinking that the doors would be easy; they're just hinged panels with a single seating surface. I would imagine that a silicone gasket, and perhaps shims for the door hinges (to account for the thickness of the gasket, whatever that comes out to be) would do it.
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#10 |
Adult Babysitter
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I converted a nice old hutch into a humidor a few years back. I used that foam insulation tape around the door and a small active humidification unit. I sealed it the best i could but it was never meant to be a humidor so passive beads would not work but i did manage to seal it well enough that my small Humi Care unit worked very well. Looked nice to boot.
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"I'm feelin' low, Apu. You got any of that beer that has candy floating in it, you know Skittlebrau?https://www.facebook.com/thebuffalobeerleague |
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