💧 Keep your guitar’s vibe flawless—humidity handled like a pro!
The D'Addario Guitar Humidifier is a non-drip, sponge-based device designed to fit acoustic guitar soundholes. It suspends from the strings to avoid contact with the guitar body, providing steady, controlled humidity to protect your instrument from dry season damage. Trusted by musicians worldwide for over 20 years, it ensures your guitar stays in peak condition.
S**G
Easy to use, effective
Its a simple solution to a simple problem, keeping your guitar humidified. Its not a good solution if you go long periods of time without playing your guitar. Obviously, keep your guitar in a closed case while not in use. You will need to refresh it every few days during winter in Maine. But it works well for my purposes.I play my guitar nearly every day, the guitar is stored in its case while not in use. The guitar lives in New England. Your results may vary.
G**D
Easy answer to instrument humidification
Your wooden musical instruments need to be properly humidified, especially during the winter when home heating systems dry out the air. These are easy to use and work great.I did notice, though, that sponges in the new ones are not as large as what I got a couple of years ago.
G**R
Works Fine & Much Better Than Nothing!
I thought I would throw my two-cents in about the new design and effectiveness of this soundhole humidifier.After making a few homemade case humidifiers out of things like a travel butter container with many holes drilled into it and a sponge, I started thinking about how some of the cases separate the body cavity from the neck & headstock cavity inside the guitar case and not allowing the humidity to flow freely to all areas, especially the body where it is needed the most.Even though I was getting acceptable humidification in the case I was concerned about the body being dryer in comparison so I went ahead and splurged the 8 bucks on these. (I actually bought three of them.)I crank the gas heat up in the house in the winter and A/C in the summer, keep my guitars inside their cases and inside a closet. The humidity drops quite low, but the sponges remain moist for several days before I can no longer fight the urge to re-wet them. lol.Two great tips in one:Use a regular, more dense sponge, thicker like the ones at the dollar store. Cut them to size and stuff them in!Throw away the sponge when it starts to get yucky and don't worry about distilled water, unless you want to. I can't argue using very pure water compared to the possibly toxic crap that comes out our faucets, but for one dollar you can get a boat load of them after you cut them to size, and toss them away without any regard when needing replaced.Don't worry about the "thing" hanging in-between your strings. It will not damage anything unless you get the sponge too saturated and it leaks. I will either squeeze the excess water out, or shake the container with the sponge inside until I am satisfied that it won't drip.The humidifier will not cause any stress or damage to your strings by spreading them when you wedge this inside your soundhole.If you ARE rough, careless, thoughtless, or stupid, you could possibly knock this loose and have it rub or fall out, but I would be more worried about the guitar and what it would take for this to happen. This would be more extreme to the guitar than the humidifier or any harm it could cause.The top snaps on by squeezing the sides to release little tabs that stick through the top cover. The sponge inside is quite small, and there isn't too much room for a much larger sponge. The device is simple and fairly solid. Treat it gently and it will last forever. You can easily clean the inside or run it through a dishwasher. If you give the inside a quick rinse every few fills, I'm sure it would be a decade before anything "built up" to require extensive cleaning or replacement.Keep an eye on it for the first few days and then weeks to get a feel for when you should be re-wetting the sponge.Try to keep the sponge moist when it's dry.I strongly suggest getting an Oasis case humidifier, (or similar) mini sized about 1" X 4" costing around 17-20 bucks.This will take any guesswork out of the equation and give you fairly accurate readings inside your guitar or instrument case.Remember, too much humidity can cause your acoustic guitar to warp. Too dry and it will shrink and crack, split the soundboard (top) also leaving the edges of the frets sticking out like the backbone of a fish and quite abrasive!If you spent more than one hundred dollars on your guitar and live where it gets cold and/or dry, you would be negligent (if not careless) to spend the pittance to make sure your 'baby ain't thirsty', or worse...dead & broken!Hope this helps!
R**O
A good guitar-preserver
When the bridge of my custom Andrew White acoustic guitar came loose recently, I realized that storing the instrument away in its case was just asking for trouble. Mainly, allowing the wood to dry out. A wooden instrument needs humidity to preserve the wood from warping and the glue from drying out.This simple, inexpensive little device solves the problem. It's little more than a thin, vented plastic case that holds a dampened sponge. It fits between (or beside) the guitar strings and hangs down inside the sound hole. But it works. And the proof is that every few days, I find that the sponge is dry and needs to be moistened again. That's an indication of just how dry the air can become even inside a tightly closed guitar case.I'm confident that the D'Addario Acoustic Guitar Humidifier is going to protect my gorgeous, high-end guitar from further deterioration. Every guitar owner should get this item to preserve and extend the life of his instrument.
G**D
works ok if guitar lays flat
I have found I do not prefer this style of humidifier.However they work well as designed.
A**R
Good idea, could use a few design enhancements.
Trying to add humidity to acoustic guitars in New England in the winter time is a challenge. The concept of this is solid, but the two clips you need to pinch to open and close the housing are poorly engineered. They are tough to pinch, and seem easy to break. I also found the width of the plastic to be a touch wide at base, and thus bends the D and G strings a lot to slide it in. Should consider thinning a bit. Otherwise, cool concept. Seems cheaper than buying the chemical packet humidifiers in the long run.
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5 days ago
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