Subject: Hair bundles for hygrothermographs
Helen McPherson <hmcpherson [at] slv__vic__gov__au> writes >We have a range of drum hygrothermographs ( thermohygrographs in our >part of the world), including battery and clockwork models, Nikkei, >Sato Sigma, Izuzu, Ogawa Seiki and Michromech. Depending on the >machine location, they run on 7 and 31 day cycles. The machines are >recalibrated using an electronic hygrometer, each time the charts >are changed. The hygrometer is recalibrated inhouse every 12 months. In my experience, all brands of these machines are the same. Some 20 years ago, we (at that time, at Westpac Archives) were given the same advice re: weekly wetting of the hairs with distilled water. The technician / sales rep. also told me there were two unrelated kinds of relative humidity, those in physics books, and those measured by their machines. While I accept there may be some logic to wetting, I thus ignored it. I have also been informed Asian hair has commonly been used because it is straight; seems tidy. I have calibrated and used these machines over 20 years, without any special treatment, and find them mostly accurate over the medium humidity range, say 30%-80%. Whenever tempted to replace hairs, just because they were old, I was confronted with an usurious replacement cost; I thus ignored it, and the machines still seemed to cover the same RH range just as accurately. When, through the fortunes of life, I entered private practice, and thus was responsible for my own fortune, I happened upon a free thermohygrograph, sans hair. Lacking the luxuriant locks of my youth, I seized a lock of my wife (and colleague)'s curly hair, washed it in non ionic detergent, rinsed in distilled water and fixed it in place. It looks a little odd, but, calibrated, works just as accurately on regular charts. I have always seen a potential problem with the build-up of hygroscopic salts on such hair. I do not know if the principle of wetting hairs was meant to deal with this. I know whenever I applied this principle, RH reading was quite unstable for weeks. In short, I too have happily used these instruments, pondered their mysteries. James Elwing Elwing and Gurney Archival Lawson, NSW, Australia *** Conservation DistList Instance 16:24 Distributed: Thursday, September 26, 2002 Message Id: cdl-16-24-005 ***Received on Friday, 27 September, 2002