
^^^^^^^^ DimmyW will see this Post ^^^^^^^ because DimmyW only pretends to IGNORE me.... just like the Nutty Professor.
My basement is finished with tung and groove knotty pine. It has a tile floor and in the summer I have to keep an eye on the floor because tiny droplets of water will form on the floor because of the moisture coming up from the concrete floor underneath. So then I will have to run a dehumidifier. It has heat down there and stays really warm because of being underground.
Actually DimmyW, the tiny droplets that form on the tile floor of your basement is condensation forming from the hot humid western Ohio air that gets in during the summer months. It's a thermodynamic process. Like Ted and ChiefAmungum say, it's not chemistry.
(1) The amount of humidity (vapor pressure, gas behavior, and temperature effects) is the discipline of PHYSICS. (2) The change from gas to liquid (condensation) is PHYSICS (3) The chemical reaction of metal with water (rust/corrosion) is the discipline is CHEMISTRY (4) The biological degradation by moisture (mold growth) is biological CHEMISTRY. Since all of this could happen in a safe, I would say: EVERYBODY"S RIGHT!! 😄
Wrong again DimmyW... nobody was even talking about biological processes or mold growth, and nobody had mentioned rust either. The argument between Ted and the Nutty Prof was about relative humidity and condensation. So your Liberal Left pal the Nutty Professor was wrong again... kinda like Al Gore is so often. The Nutty Prof should stick to his cute furry mammals. Now if the Nutty Professor had blown up his gun safe with an overload of 5744 powder and primers, as he did with his Rock Island Model of 1903 Springfield rifle, then THAT would be chemistry.
P.S.- Lake Erie is now 100% frozen over for the first time since 1994, and it is going down to -13 degrees F tonite here. My area is on track to break the 1936 record of consecutive sub-zero nights. You call it Climate Change, and live in a state of fear and panic. Normal people call it a slightly colder than average Winter.