drying cabinets
 

  You don't need to be an 'investor' to invest in Singletrack: 6 days left: 95% of target - Find out more

drying cabinets

38 Posts
28 Users
18 Reactions
986 Views
 5lab
Posts: 7921
Free Member
Topic starter
 

a few companies sell big cupboards with what appears to have the non-tumbling innerds of a tumble drier within them, such as https://www.mould-stop.co.uk/collections/drying-cabinets - Peko, electrolux and asko appear to be the big vendors.

They seem like a good solution for an outdoorsy family - an ability to get all the kit dry, even stuff you can't pop into the tumble drier (wetsuits, boots etc) - but they seem disproportionately expensive - for £1200 or so you just get a vented one (that simply warms up the air and lets it blow out) and for double that you get a heat-pump model - both at least 5x the price of a tumble drier. The extra efficiency of the latter appears (with domestic use) not to have a great ROI.

I'd seen them mentioned on here before, and I'm tempted by one (we have some space I can use), but I don't want to blow lots of cash then find out they're a bit useless, so thought I'd see if anyone has real-world experience?


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 4:23 pm
mrmarcus and mrmarcus reacted
Posts: 45504
Free Member
 

I don't, but have a friend in Estonia who swears by theirs...


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 4:32 pm
Posts: 3723
Free Member
 

We've got a couple of the 4 grand "Peko DC6-8 Drying Cabinet"  at work, they're bloody fantastic. They get absolutely filled with wet kit in the morning and by home time they're dry as a bone, even the boots that get left in the bottom.


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 4:34 pm
Posts: 13916
Free Member
 

Never seen one of those but £1200!!!

If was putting one in a garage or similar I'd knock one up pretty easily from an old tall fridge or freezer (insulated so pretty efficient) with some vents in the top, a heat pad in the bottom connected to an external wifi switch and a Pi or ESP8266 fitted with a temperature and humidity sensor switching it on and off via IFTTT.

Actually I'm quite tempted to give it a go!  What temperature do they run at?


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 4:47 pm
Posts: 5055
Free Member
 

Or just make the equivalent of a Youth Hostel drying room in as big a cabinet (wardrobe?) as you need - with an appropriately sized electric pipe-type heater?

Dimplex 40W Electric Wall-Mounted Tube Heater - Screwfix


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 4:49 pm
Posts: 13916
Free Member
 

Yeah, a tube heater would be better than a heat pad.


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 4:55 pm
Posts: 15068
Full Member
 

Just thinking out loud...

If it's a large thing you want for hanging clothes in etc.. It's going to be expensive for a ready made solution.

If you already have an enclosed space or alcove to do it in..like a wardrobe type scenario..

A heater and an extraction fan to dispel damp air is what you want.


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 4:57 pm
 5lab
Posts: 7921
Free Member
Topic starter
 

well this is why I wanted feedback - I figured I could knock up an old cupboard with a heater/dehumidifier in the bottom for under £500 but presumably these work a bit better? maybe not..


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 5:05 pm
Posts: 33325
Full Member
 

I used to have an airing cupboard, but it’s now got my central heating system inside, so Joey used a folding airing stand thing that sits on the landing, which worked ok, but took time, but then I discovered Lidl did a heated version with a cover, cost about £50-ish, and is a life saver when the weather’s crap - apart from bedding, I can get a machine load of washing on it, put the cover on and turn it on and leave it. I’ll turn it off overnight, so maybe a couple of days to dry a month or so’s worth of laundry.


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 5:16 pm
Posts: 1019
Free Member
 

Dehumidifier and a clothes horse/rail dries most of my washing in 4-5 hours and cost less than £120


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 5:23 pm
mashr, anorak, anorak and 1 people reacted
Posts: 15068
Full Member
 

well this is why I wanted feedback – I figured I could knock up an old cupboard with a heater/dehumidifier in the bottom for under £500 but presumably these work a bit better? maybe not..

Same principal I guess..

You just need an enclosed space with an extractor fan and a heat source.. Preferably both controllable so you can balance the extraction speed of the damp air with the heater.


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 5:29 pm
Posts: 3002
Full Member
 

Buy a £100-£200 Dessicant type dehumidier and turn any room in the house you fancy into a drying room?

(Like @pothead, it works perfectly).


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 5:38 pm
Posts: 15068
Full Member
Posts: 8318
Full Member
 

30 years ago when I was a photographer at the MOD I commandeered one of the film drying cabinets for my cycling kit. Not just great when I arrived wet but brilliant to give everything a quick heat up before riding home in the winter.


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 6:22 pm
hightensionline, Murray, hightensionline and 1 people reacted
Posts: 978
Free Member
 

The Peko drying cabinets are great pieces of kit. We've had one for a few years and it gets used a lot at this time of year for cycling kit and motorbike kit after commutes.

They're not cheap but are a game changer for us.


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 6:26 pm
Posts: 3284
Free Member
 

Dehumidifier and a clothes horse/rail dries most of my washing in 4-5 hours and cost less than £120

In our old flat we had a Molly maid rack that hung from our hall ceiling. If it was raining we hung washing on that then ran the meaco dehumidifier below it. Dried everything really quickly.

Plus you'll have a dehumidifier for other duties eg in the car


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 6:29 pm
Posts: 15907
Free Member
 

Can’t you just turn your heating on in your house ?


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 6:32 pm
Posts: 15068
Full Member
 

Can’t you just turn your heating on in your house

That would increase the relative humidity for the whole house.

Comfortable and healthy relative humidity is considered to be between 50% - 60%.


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 6:44 pm
Posts: 6603
Free Member
 5lab
Posts: 7921
Free Member
Topic starter
 

Can’t you just turn your heating on in your house ?

a wetsuit or proper pair of boots will take 3-4 days to dry out in a warm house, as will a thick kids coat that fell in a puddle (along with the kid). Looking for a solution that's faster than that.

Seems like those who've tried one love it, they come up used on ebay every so often, so maybe that's the path forwards.

We could turn the whole utility room into a drying room, but it'll have a fair amount of foot traffic so I'm not sure that'll work too well. We don't need a dehumidifier for anything else.


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 8:52 pm
Posts: 3384
Free Member
 

I'm drunk but we purposed wig dryers from the theatre

Try to remember to add details tomorrow.


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 9:41 pm
Posts: 9093
Full Member
 

At work, we have had something like this for the last 10 years for the whole academic building

https://sciquip.co.uk/leec-drying-cabinets.html?gad_source=1&gclid=CjwKCAiAmMC6BhA6EiwAdN5iLcTW20OUOeG3Icbo-Aqlq8L8ARHTLywfLjeUS3F4qjelPixzMeRUOhoCh3QQAvD_BwE

It has 4 shelves. I compact my gear to one shelf (shorts, trousers, base, top, gloves etc), but there are folk who spread their gear out over two, then say - oh loads of room, like this morning. Do not get me started on the folk that don't regularly wash their towels - oh the pong is bad.  I leave my kit on the bottom, it's all washed every night.   I think I'm going to have to leave a note about laundering towels, as the smell is getting bad - eye singe opening the door.

It's grim. That's all we have for loads of staff. Can't dry gear in office.


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 9:51 pm
Posts: 3438
Full Member
 

Our boiler cupboard fits a clothes rack and a dehumidifier with a timer.

Cost is much less than £1200

What about a wardrobe with a vent and a dehumidifier?


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 10:32 pm
 aggs
Posts: 360
Free Member
 

We had one the size of a typical tall fridge freezer once, a good few years ago.

Worked well until i dropped it when movin and wrecked the door.

The main thing is venting it to outside and its was quite noisey from memory.

We had it in an outside shed.

Its was quite small really, a room is more practical if u have the space.

I would not get one again


 
Posted : 04/12/2024 10:47 pm
Posts: 15261
Free Member
 

Charity shop used wardrobe, cut a hole near the base and point a fan heater at it? Maybe drill some vent holes towards the top?

Pop it out in the garage... For when it bursts into flames.


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 12:01 am
Posts: 1358
Full Member
 

In Sweden it's common for there to be a wardrobe in reception inside the front door with an air conditioner in it. Usually full of slippers and crocs first thing, as that's all they seem to wear in offices.


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 8:12 am
Posts: 13916
Free Member
 

In our old flat we had a Molly maid rack that hung from our hall ceiling.

We're fortunate* enough to have a massive old oil boiler in the utility room which we sit a clothes rack on top of.

It's pretty effective at drying stuff and the room has two holes in the wall to feed air to the boiler so there's no humidity issue.

* Not really..... It's huge and inefficient


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 8:42 am
Posts: 9201
Full Member
 

Stayed at a ski resort hotel in Finland that had these in every room, they were superb. We now have a big industrial one at work which is equally brilliant. If I had loads of space and money I get one but I'm fortunate to have a large downstairs bathroom next to the garage, I use a heated clothes rail from Lakeland with a dehumidifier running, its very effective just a little bit more faff to set up. Not enough faff to justify spending £1k on a cabinet though.


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 8:53 am
Posts: 9093
Full Member
 

At home we have one of those old fashioned type clothes maidens that can raise up and down - located in the kitchen bay window. We pop the dehumidifier underneath and it will dry my cycling kit out over night and my winter boots !


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 10:06 am
Posts: 40225
Free Member
 

+1 for dessicant dehumidifier, which is also more portable and useful around the house.

Coupled with a £25 boot drying machine off Amazon


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 12:01 pm
Posts: 13916
Free Member
 

+1 for dessicant dehumidifier, which is also more portable and useful around the house.

According to Meaco they are really aimed at low temperature use - a compressor dehumidifier is more efficient and cheaper to run at house temperatures (anything over 14c I think)


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 12:11 pm
 poly
Posts: 8699
Free Member
 

well this is why I wanted feedback – I figured I could knock up an old cupboard with a heater/dehumidifier in the bottom for under £500 but presumably these work a bit better? maybe not.

Nor sure if the commercial product is more efficient but its quite a price difference so would need to be phenomenaly efficient to even make it a consideration.  A suitable cupboard not overloaded so that you still have good air circulation and a good dehummer (preferably with a drain) will work well.  If its in a cold area like a garage you may need some heat too.  In a utility room not so much.  Your battle will not be the equipment - it will be idiot family members who expect stuff to dry when its just left in a heap in the cupboard.


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 12:20 pm
Posts: 254
Free Member
 

A fan heater and a dehumidifier in a small ish room can dry your eye balls out of your skull in 1 hour.


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 1:51 pm
Posts: 9093
Full Member
 

Does OP have a room/area where he could hang clothing and place a dehumidifier. Lots cheaper than a cabinet and more useful. Even using a freestanding clothes rail in a utility room/hallway and a dehumidifier will have kit dry.  We've both a compressor and desiccant de-humidifiers.


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 2:02 pm
 mert
Posts: 3831
Free Member
 

In Sweden it’s common for there to be a wardrobe in reception inside the front door with an air conditioner in it. Usually full of slippers and crocs first thing, as that’s all they seem to wear in offices.

Yeah, i've been to loads of office premises that have them. Not at our place though, space for 1200 pairs of shoes/jackets/etc (just for the building i'm in) might get a bit spendy. So we have multiple large, tiled and moderately heated cloakrooms. Takes all day to dry out, but it does get dry.

Stayed at a ski resort hotel in Finland that had these in every room

An acquaintance did a massive install for Skistar 15 odd years ago after he'd worked a season skiing up there (he's an electrical engineer/commercial electrician by trade), hundreds and hundreds of cabinets. Someone had worked out that the damage from an entire seasons worth of wet ski gear being hung inside the front door and dripping all over the floor and wall was more expensive than having a cabinet in every chalet/hotel room/accommodation space where it was physically possible...

And a few neighbours have them, usually the horsey/doggy people, or those who work outside.

Can get them from about 4-500 quid here. Half height, big enough for maybe 2 adults, 2 kids worth of outer clothing at a push. The kids day cares have all had them, usually massive great honking things, the current place has 3 or 4 2x2m cabinets. Usually get 25-30 kids worth of boots, coats, trousers, overalls, gloves and hats in each one.


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 2:08 pm
Posts: 1085
Full Member
 

dehumidifier in a cupboard (where my old water tank was) works well and takes a third of  a day to dry laundry.  It cost £100 so not sure what you're gaining with the cabinet


 
Posted : 05/12/2024 2:24 pm
Posts: 1592
Full Member
 mert
Posts: 3831
Free Member
 

I’m failing to see why you would pay £1500 when you seem to be able to get the same result for about £100.

The 100 quid ones really don't last, they don't like heavy stuff on them, they don't even dry heavy stuff very well. The cabinets are designed for drying heavy stuff. A cabinet might also last 20+ years of drying heavy stuff. My rack (which is on that page from lakeland) is pretty shagged after 2 years, putting my jacket on it makes it lean worryingly and has cracked a few bits of the plastic. Hell, even filling it with jeans and t-shirts makes it lean noticably.

Just a shame i've not really got the space for a drying cabinet. It's something i'll look into if/when i move.


 
Posted : 06/12/2024 8:49 am
johnhe and johnhe reacted
Posts: 1594
Free Member
 

+1 for a dehumidifier.  We use one to dry most of our clothes.  It can even dry a full load of big towels inside 18 hours, or a normal wash in 10 hours.  We just use a clothes drying rack and a 20L dehumidifier in a small room.  We have a Meaco (to dry out the house) and an Ebac (purely for clothes drying), I find the Meaco is more effective/appears to put out less waste heat.


 
Posted : 06/12/2024 10:17 am

6 DAYS LEFT
We are currently at 95% of our target!