Won't be an issue imo. Came from a family of reloaders on the eastern side of the state. All reloading was done in the garage, shops or out buildings with no heat, air or dehumidifiers.
I reload in the hot and humid garage and have never had a problem except heat exhaustion [emoji3]. However, I keep powder and primers in the climate controlled house until ready to use.
I reload in the hot and humid garage and have never had a problem except heat exhaustion [emoji3]. However, I keep powder and primers in the climate controlled house until ready to use.
Get a window unit!!! problem solved. If you use beam scales for powder a fan will mess with them, I have a ceiling fan in my office/toy room and have to turn it off when loading.
Nice! Talking to some of the long time loaders and most of them said to get beam scales to double check the digital scales on occasion. Lot of guys here will help you and know way more than me. I just started reloading in December so all I can do is pass on info I have found here and on a couple of other boards. I have to say I really enjoy the whole process, from research to working up loads, especially enjoy the cheaper holes in paper. Problem is now I seem to be putting more holes in paper LOL. Good problem to have I think
Not an issue at all, just keep powder and primers in a controlled setting/storage prior to use. Been reloading many years in the shop now and (knock on wood) ain't been blown up by firing into a squib yet.
Well, I'm going against the grain here. I keep my powder and primers in the hot/cold/humid shop where I reload. Been rolling my own since the early 80's, and can't contribute one failure to environmental issues while storing powder/primers. They are in a painted wood storage cabinet with doors, but that's it.
I'm getting ready to close in the reloading area and put an AC unit in there, but it will be for my preservation and not components.