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This post is very relevant at this time, when most of us here in the United States are experiencing winter weather conditions. There is nothing at all wrong with transporting or storing your gear in a cold vehicle, but exercise caution when you move your equipment from a cold vehicle or storage area into an indoor space with a condensing atmosphere. What does this mean? For those of use who wear eyeglasses, that's easily explained: after we have been outside in the cold, then come inside, our glasses "fog up." This fogging is water that has condensed onto the cold lenses from the room air, which is a condensing atmosphere. The same thing happens to the internal circuit boards and components in your equipment: water condenses onto the cold surfaces. While the condensed water is not in itself a problem, it can suspend or dissolve material on the components or circuit boards that can form electrically conductive current leakage paths across the circuit board surface. In order to prevent this from causing problems with your gear, play it safe, and allow several minutes for your equipment to warm up to room temperature before using it.
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