Hi Cody
Since I only live about 80 miles south of you, your experience is very relavant to me.
I suspect it takes much less time to dry in the summer than in the winter, but do you have an estimate as to average drying time for a full load? Do you change the air flow rate from summer to winter so that the dry time stays the same? Do you know how low the moisture content can be brought to using this kiln?
In the summer, two-to-three weeks is about as long as it takes to dry any species. Oak is at the longer end of that period because I leave the vents almost closed for the entire time. Walnut will dry in two weeks because it is so forgiving. The temperature in my kiln routinely tops 140 degrees during the day.
Winter drying is dependent on the number of good drying days but add another two weeks to the summer drying time and that's close to the average.
I have the fan on a timer so that it comes on at 10:00 a.m. and goes off at 8:00 p.m. year round. On rainy days, I shut off the switch so that it doesn't run at all (or have my wife or one of the kids do it).
In the summer, I can get the lumber down to 6% MC. In the winter, I shoot for 8% MC.
The RH of the wood will balance to what ever the RH is where the lumber is stored. SO, if you kiln dry it down to 8%, then move the lumber to an unheated, non air conditioned building, the lumber will start picking moisture back up.
SR
The lumber will regain moisture if placed in an environment where the average RH is higher than 35%. However, if the lumber is indoors, even in an unheated/air-conditioned space, the EMC will remain much lower than it would be if it were stacked outdoors with a cover over it. That's because the inside of a closed building doesn't see the near-100% relative humidities hat the outdoors sees.
Even if the wood were dried to 8% and then placed in a 12% EMC environment, it would never regain moisture back to 12%. That is known as the hysteresis effect. It would never get beyond about 11% MC and even then it would take a long time.
Also, while the surface may regain moisture back to 11% the core will take many months to regain moisture back to even 9%. Once it is brought back into a 35% RH environment at 70 degrees F or more, it will quickly lose moisture back to near the kiln-dried value.
Or, one could simply wrap the kiln-dried stack in plastic and it would not change in MC at all, regardless of the RH or temperature.