i have a 3/4 inch sheet of MDF laying around... need to find something useful for it... would this be suitable for a hot box? or is the heat not going to go well with the chemicals used to bind the MDF?.. i know its nasty stuff to inhale if youre cutting it
second, IF i can use MDF, would it be a suitable insulator as well? i ask these questions because this is what i already have
if not, ill just make a frame with construction grade pine, route a lip around the inside of the frame to cut sections of thin plywood for aesthetics, and then line the interior with the foam insulation which im thinking ill attach with double-back tape
one idea, which seems to be a common one is using light fixtures to hold 100w or 125w bulbs... is this the most efficient way to go?, or would using an inexpensive heating coil, perhaps even the screw in type heating coil a hot water heater uses which is inexpensive, and less energy is used to actually convert into light, so more wattage will go into making heat
also what i plan to do is use one of those dial-face thermometers with the stem... drill a hole into the front of the box, press this thermometer in so i can get an accurate reading on the inside of the box without opening it, and these thermometers are like $5
lastly, reading humidity in the air, tells you what the humidity in the air is, the only accurate way to tell how much has actually been removed from the wood is to weigh it before and after, so one idea i had as maybe a future add-on of this box was to mount a pressure-plate inside, to that would be bolted a light sheet of plywood to match the floor of the box... that way when you put your wood in you can take a reading, calculate what it should weigh when its done, then check the weight periodically until it matches that figure
those are my ideas so far.. and i should mention that i have an otherwise fully equipped woodshop that i use for a variety of tasks, a major use is building musical instruments, so having such detailed control over the wood would be worth the little extra cost to do something like add something to the inside to weigh the wood as it dries