| Author
|
Thread |
|
|
Daze
Wannabe

Joined: Nov 01, 2006
Posts: 2
|
can the cold damage my equipment??
Hi all,
I have recently moved house and in my new house I have a HUGE workshop 39 foot long by 15 foot wide, and I am wanting to turn this into a recording studio.
My question is I am a little worried about the temperature in the workshop, it can get a little cold here in the UK in the winter.
My main worry is that if I don't keep my equipment above a certain temperature that anything that contains LCD could get damaged (ie the liquid could freeze up)
Am I right to worry and do I need some kind of heating in there to keep the temp above freezing or am I been silly???
(i was going to put an heater in there for me when I'm in the studio, but I'm worried about when I'm not)
Cheers
Darren
|
Wed Nov 01, 2006 2:05 pm |
|
|
RhoneRanger
Engineer

Joined: Nov 04, 2005
Posts: 332
|
As long as you let it warm up to a decent temp before using, no damage done.
I live in the northern portion of the US, and during storage times and moving, etc, or leaving equipment in the truck during the winter, I have not had any problems.
As far as the 'liquid' it takes a pretty cold day to freeze that.
Just let the equipment reach a decent temp before using (above 10 C is probably good enough.)
|
Wed Nov 01, 2006 3:35 pm |
|
|
AC
Chief

Joined: Oct 31, 2002
Posts: 1075
|
| RhoneRanger wrote: |
As long as you let it warm up to a decent temp before using, no damage done.
I live in the northern portion of the US, and during storage times and moving, etc, or leaving equipment in the truck during the winter, I have not had any problems.
As far as the 'liquid' it takes a pretty cold day to freeze that.
Just let the equipment reach a decent temp before using (above 10 C is probably good enough.) |
Yes and this warming is IS VERY important, because as the gear warms up small amounts of condensation form on the electronics, this can short circuit.
Might be an idea to put a heater on for a while to warm things up first. _________________ Recording Studio Suntans
|
Wed Nov 01, 2006 5:41 pm |
|
|
|
|
CrimsonDrummer
Trainee

Joined: Oct 23, 2006
Posts: 58
|
If your going to be storing any instruments in that space as well (especially drums or acoustic guitars) there may be some worry with the expanding and contracting of the wood that could cause unwanted difficulties tuning. What you could do is spend $70 bucks and get a space heater. It'll cost you a little money every month in electricity but then you don't have to worry at all. Just a suggestion. _________________ Bob Seifert, SEIT
LiveSine Productions
Drummer of 3up3down
|
Thu Nov 02, 2006 4:49 pm |
|
|
|