CaliJoe
Member
I am helping a friend with his legal grow and we are experiencing very high humidity problems in a box, along with what comes with that, powder mold. I have a little experience from many years ago and he has none, just to give you an idea on experience level, ie. we are beginners. This is my first attempt at helping someone grow in a much more humid environment than I am used to. We have tried several things to resolve it so far but nothing is helping. There is only 1 more thing left to do that I think will solve the issue but I want to get a second opinion because my friend doesn't want to play guessing games anymore, he just wants to issue fixed. Humidity has been in the 70-85% range the entire grow. We are now starting week 4 of flowering. A few pictures before I get into what we have done. My main goal of this box was to use the least amount of electricity possible, and we are using just under 300w for the entire box.
So, as expected, as plants grew, humidity has risen from 65% up to 85% at its highest. When it reached 80% I added a small dehumidifier and 4 containers of Damprid. While both methods appeared to be pulling moisture out of the air (dehumidifier fills up every 2-3 days) it wasn't helping. There are 4 125cfm fans pulling air in the bottom of the box and maybe 125cfm going out, so 4x in than out, which we both agree has to be part of what is causing the problems. The box is in a garage. Opening the front and back doors of the garage and closet doors to the point it is a wind tunnel in the garage still doesn't solve the issue. Humidity outside will read 60 while it will still read 70 in the box even with all the doors open and all the fresh air it can handle. We added a vent to the outside and connected the 4 intake fans to the vent so it is getting 100% fresh air on the intake. It exhaust into the garage through a carbon filter. By adding the vent to take in fresh air we were able to drop the humidity from 85% down to 70%, but still can't get much lower than that, and that is way to high as we are fighting tooth and nail daily to fight back mold using milk/water and neem oil. We are keeping it at bay but it is a losing battle if we can't get the humidity down. Other details, 6 plants in 50G container (35G of water) with large air pump and 4 airstones in a 5'x3'x6' box (we realize now there are too many plants for that small of an area and we need to work on our scrog technique). GH nutes + calmag. pH 5.7-6.0, temp 68-72, ppm 620, ec .88. Water used is 0 TDS RO/DI.
So, all that and the only question we have is: Will drilling another hole in the house for an exhaust vent, along with a stronger cfm going out thancoming in solve the humidity issue? Or can we use the current vent as an exhaust (with a 6" booster fan) and intake the air from the garage (so we don't have to drill another 7" hole in the stucco on the house)?
So, as expected, as plants grew, humidity has risen from 65% up to 85% at its highest. When it reached 80% I added a small dehumidifier and 4 containers of Damprid. While both methods appeared to be pulling moisture out of the air (dehumidifier fills up every 2-3 days) it wasn't helping. There are 4 125cfm fans pulling air in the bottom of the box and maybe 125cfm going out, so 4x in than out, which we both agree has to be part of what is causing the problems. The box is in a garage. Opening the front and back doors of the garage and closet doors to the point it is a wind tunnel in the garage still doesn't solve the issue. Humidity outside will read 60 while it will still read 70 in the box even with all the doors open and all the fresh air it can handle. We added a vent to the outside and connected the 4 intake fans to the vent so it is getting 100% fresh air on the intake. It exhaust into the garage through a carbon filter. By adding the vent to take in fresh air we were able to drop the humidity from 85% down to 70%, but still can't get much lower than that, and that is way to high as we are fighting tooth and nail daily to fight back mold using milk/water and neem oil. We are keeping it at bay but it is a losing battle if we can't get the humidity down. Other details, 6 plants in 50G container (35G of water) with large air pump and 4 airstones in a 5'x3'x6' box (we realize now there are too many plants for that small of an area and we need to work on our scrog technique). GH nutes + calmag. pH 5.7-6.0, temp 68-72, ppm 620, ec .88. Water used is 0 TDS RO/DI.
So, all that and the only question we have is: Will drilling another hole in the house for an exhaust vent, along with a stronger cfm going out thancoming in solve the humidity issue? Or can we use the current vent as an exhaust (with a 6" booster fan) and intake the air from the garage (so we don't have to drill another 7" hole in the stucco on the house)?