superstoner1
Well-Known Member
Any ac will remove moisture and affect rh, that is the basic principle of how they work.
yes you are right i want thinking.Any ac will remove moisture and affect rh, that is the basic principle of how they work.
Just wanted to say thanks you gave me some ideas that seemed to restart my brain as it was locked on there way of water control (hydro innovations) which uses a huge chiller and just wasnt practical for my application. I rearranged my room last night and had the best night sleep in month, because of something you said running the setup with passive at least partially. So I re-ran the ducting coming from outside and through the hood up and out into the attic running my daytime cycle through the night temps are cool enough to keep, room close to ideal temps (76°- 79°). Adding the heat exchanger on top of the can fliter with the fan pushing the air through it dropped the temps an allowed for chiller to keep up and get a long awaited break lol. Everything kept up well, room stayed at 76.4° through the cycle and got as high as 78.4° at the very end of cycle (due to outside temps getting higher after sunrise). The one question I had is using my can filter seems to drop my RH%, is this normal with the can filter as I've had this problem before. The room is pretty dang sealed off ducts, hood, etc.I'm not against water cooling. I'm actually interested in passive cooling which would be the best in a cold climate.
I guess I just assumed you were flowing it against the bulb, in that video they were
Crystal sheet glass......never heard of it...and I'm a skeptic, have any references for that data?
I don't move my lights that much, but veg in a different spot
How low would your RH go?
You should be able to seal your duct\hood. Maybe a smoke candle might help.
- Jiji