myke
Well-Known Member
With all this cold my NG house furnace is running so much my humidity has dropped a lot.Up north we use dehumidifiers down south go AC, Dehuys put out tons of nice dry heat
With all this cold my NG house furnace is running so much my humidity has dropped a lot.Up north we use dehumidifiers down south go AC, Dehuys put out tons of nice dry heat
yup i have hot air furnace very dry when it gets 10-20 below zero step out on the deck in the morning sounds like a gun going off with the pop.I grew up shoveling coal into our coal furnace which goes from very hot to cool but the heated air was so dry, it was common maintenance to reglue joints on furniture especially dining tables and chairs.
Yup furnace will dry stuff out quick not so much with a boiler.With all this cold my NG house furnace is running so much my humidity has dropped a lot.
And this is why they work so well.Dehuys put out tons of nice dry heat
If you look at an air conditioner, it's actually producing more heat than cooling. On the cold side, it might even be condensing water but as the air warms up, its RH falls.Really? Airconditioning can't lower humidity, heat must be added?
Is that why most growers use dehumidifiers?
What does one do if the temp is 30C and the humidity is too high?
Gonna disagree with u on that one; its true that if the moisture content of the air remains the same and temps increase that the RELATIVE humidity will decrease...and if temps fall then RELATIVE humidity will increase.If you look at an air conditioner, it's actually producing more heat than cooling. On the cold side, it might even be condensing water but as the air warms up, its RH falls.
A dehuey is basically an AC unit you leave in the room, rather than sticking the hot end outside of it. The reason it dehumidifies has little to do with the trickle of water running out of it but rather the heat it's rejecting out the back of the unit.
Some commercial dehumidifiers even have the option to duct the heat out of yhe space being dehumidified.Gonna disagree with u on that one; its true that if the moisture content of the air remains the same and temps increase that the RELATIVE humidity will decrease...and if temps fall then RELATIVE humidity will increase.
You are wrong on dehumidifiers.
They are essentially air conditions, that is correct. The difference is that the a/c part of a dehu serves to cools a coil which allows moisture from the room to condense and collect on the coils, this is how moisture is removed from the room.
Yes any heater, including a dehumidifier will decrease relative humidity simply by increasing the temp(assuming of course that the moisture content of the air remains a constant) that is not how a dehu removes moisture. It actually removes moisture.
True the water that comes out of mine is ice cold.Gonna disagree with u on that one; its true that if the moisture content of the air remains the same and temps increase that the RELATIVE humidity will decrease...and if temps fall then RELATIVE humidity will increase.
You are wrong on dehumidifiers.
They are essentially air conditions, that is correct. The difference is that the a/c part of a dehu serves to cools a coil which allows moisture from the room to condense and collect on the coils, this is how moisture is removed from the room.
Yes any heater, including a dehumidifier will decrease relative humidity simply by increasing the temp(assuming of course that the moisture content of the air remains a constant) that is not how a dehu removes moisture. It actually removes moisture.
You need both coils: condenser and evaporator to get it work. Their names comes from in which stage the refridgerant is. AC is suppose to cool thats why you exhaust the air which goes through condenser out. Thats the case of portable units. If you have minisplit than you just have your condenser in your outside unit. AC dehumidify as well. Dehu is not suppose to cool down and they work better with higher temp thats the reason why the air is not exhausted oustside rather than expelled back in the room. You are basically right about temp/RH relationship but You should take into consideration that you have plants in your room. But it has been said, higher temps means higher transpiration so adding heater into the room wont lower your RH thats BS!Gonna disagree with u on that one; its true that if the moisture content of the air remains the same and temps increase that the RELATIVE humidity will decrease...and if temps fall then RELATIVE humidity will increase.
You are wrong on dehumidifiers.
They are essentially air conditions, that is correct. The difference is that the a/c part of a dehu serves to cools a coil which allows moisture from the room to condense and collect on the coils, this is how moisture is removed from the room.
Yes any heater, including a dehumidifier will decrease relative humidity simply by increasing the temp(assuming of course that the moisture content of the air remains a constant) that is not how a dehu removes moisture. It actually removes moisture.
It's called RELATIVE humidity for a reason, and that reason is because the ability of air to hold moisture changes with temperature. The warmer it is, the more moisture the air can hold, therefore RH falls unless more moisture is being added.A heater won’t bring the RH down,
The theory is correct. Practice is like this: you have grow space with some temp/RH. You rise your temp while amount of the water in the air stays the same (assuming there is no living biomass in there) so your RH drops thats fine. But once you have plants there and you rise your temp you are actually also rising VPD which means that the amount of water respired by the plants is also higher. Without removing the water from the air the effect is completely opposite than and you end up with hot and humid environment and thats much worse than cold and humid. Dehu’s work can not be replaced by adding a heater…It's called RELATIVE humidity for a reason, and that reason is because the ability of air to hold moisture changes with temperature. The warmer it is, the more moisture the air can hold, therefore RH falls unless more moisture is being added.
Strange chart?The theory is correct. Practice is like this: you have grow space with some temp/RH. You rise your temp while amount of the water in the air stays the same (assuming there is no living biomass in there) so your RH drops thats fine. But once you have plants there and you rise your temp you are actually also rising VPD which means that the amount of water respired by the plants is also higher. Without removing the water from the air the effect is completely opposite than and you end up with hot and humid environment and thats much worse than cold and humid. Dehu’s work can not be replaced by adding a heater…
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