Re: [CR] Bike storage?heat/Now cold, too...possible damage from a furnace?

(Example: Framebuilding:Restoration)

In-Reply-To: <000601cacc56$55eb2cd0$01c18670$@com>
References: <000601cacc56$55eb2cd0$01c18670$@com>
Date: Thu, 25 Mar 2010 16:23:49 -0400
From: "Ken Freeman" <kenfreeman096@gmail.com>
To: Tom Sanders <tom@orderandchaos.com>, Classic Rendezvous <classicrendezvous@bikelist.org>
Subject: Re: [CR] Bike storage?heat/Now cold, too...possible damage from a furnace?


I can't say I know exactly what the physics was that Greg was talking about, but I can say I do not keep them near to or in view of the furnace. Any radiation less penetrating than X-ray is blocked by a wooden wall, and the air flow into the little former coal room is minimal. Effectively, they're in the other end, NOS tubulars and all.

On Thu, Mar 25, 2010 at 4:04 PM, Tom Sanders <tom@orderandchaos.com> wrote:
> Ken Freeman wrote that he keeps his bikes in the basement. Years ago I
> bought 80# of new in the box Campagnolo parts from a gent and took them to
> Greg Parker to sell them. Greg is about as canny as anyone about such
> things and he looked the stuff over and said he was surprised that it had
> all been kept in a basement these many years, because there was no evidence
> of damage from the furnace. He said they must have been in the other end
> of
> the basement. He went on to say that a furnace gives off something like
> Ultra violet (no that doesn't sound right , does it? I must have it a bit
> mixed up) that deteriorates tires, brake hoods, cables, washers, etc. I
> cannot for the life of me recall whether it was Ultra Violet, electro
> magnetic or what it was that was damaging. Might anyone recall hearing
> something like this?
>
> Tom Sanders
>
> Lansing, MI USA
>
> _______________________________________________
>

--
Ken Freeman
Ann Arbor, MI USA