Amish Lumber Kiln
Unlike most woodworkers, Vic worries about relative humidity and its effect on the lumber he works with. During the humid summer months he keeps a wood stove burning in the shop to lower the relative humidity. It was uncomfortable hot in his shop. We “English” can get the same result from running a dehumidifier.
Vic’s kiln is a large closet containing a wood stove and racks of lumber, stickered between courses, plus piles of chair seats and spindles. I would guess the room was about 120 F. It’s similar to hot room drying which I describe in Drying Lumber without a Kiln (available at www.petersieling.com). You adjust the RH by raising the temperature. Lumber has to be air dried going into the room because you don’t have a steady air flow across the boards. If you did, and started with green lumber, a small amount of stress will develop which has to be relieved using higher temperature (160-180 F) at the end of drying plus the air needs to be saturated with steam.