Someone recently posted a link to
this site where I read the following about reconditioning rods:
</font><font color="blue" class="small">( 4.3.1.2 The recommended storage and rebake temperatures for Atom Arc low hydrogen electrodes are follows:
STORAGE RECONDITIONED
225-300°F 1 hr. @700°F )</font>
Of course, it's talking about low hydrogen rods (e.g. 7018), which require very low water content in the coating for proper use. Based on that, I think that you want to put them in the oven on "Self Clean" setting and let them bake. I'd imagine that you could dry them a bit slower at 450 and feel safer.
That's about where I'd start with old rods if it were me (which reminds me, I have a few packs of opened rods, too!). I guess you'll always drive some moisture out if you heat them over 212*F for a long time, but hotter is probably better if you actually want to get it done.
A trick that my buddy taught me for seasoning cast iron is to do it on the gas grill outside. It gets plenty hot, and the wife doesn't complain about the smell. Heck, I hate the smell too, and the burning eyes!
So, for rods, forget the oven and try wrapping them loosely in heavy duty foil and placing them on the upper rack of your (or your neighbor's if you don't own one /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif) gas grill and put it on high with the lid closed for a good hour or so. When you turn it off and let them cool a bit you can throw them directly into a large ammo can for storage (you do keep large ammo cans around for these kinds of things, don't you?).
Please let us know how this works, since I have a lot of rods that need it also. I didn't know until I read the ESAB lesson last week that I needed to keep them that dry; I just figured that out of the rain was good. Here in Florida, it gets so humid that they might as well be out in the rain.
Regards,
Just Gary