thats pretty high lights off temps. if your ac turns on when your lights come on, and lower the temps significantly, thats called a "cold air dump". flower growers do it for the first two hours of lights on, which causes very short internodal spacing (making for short, bushy plants).
i'd suggest leaving your ac on at night, but turning it down so the temps rise into the low 70s. it shouldn't take nearly as much energy with the lights off, you'd maintain a better differential, and a lower rh
The ac and dehumidifier fight each other all night every couple of minutes. Once the ac reaches the target temperature, the compressor kicks off and it spits out air that's super wet and raises the RH to 99% within a minute or two.That's when the dehumidifier kicks on, corrects the RH, however it puts out enough heat to cause the AC to kick back on.. and it's like that all night for 12 hours straight.
I found a method that might work, and I wanted to give it a shot, but I needed to make sure that my environmental numbers are good enough.
Basically, I'll be opening my flower room door about half an inch, possibly all the way up to an inch, and then placing a weight behind it so that it cannot open any further.
When the AC is running, the negative pressure is enough to cause the door to close, and after the AC compressor stops running the door opens back up slightly.
That way when the lights and AC turn off for the day, the flowering room door pops open about an inch, and the fan and dehumidifier should be enough to move around air and keep the humidity in check.
In the morning when the lights and AC turn back on, the negative pressure closes the flowering room door, and it continues for the daily cycle.
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I've been trying to figure out a way to achieve this without getting a "smart vent" to open after lights off.