Helmut79
Well-Known Member
Relative humidity, expressed as a percent, measures the current absolute humidity relative to the maximum (highest point) for that temperature.
Absolute humidity is the water content of air at a given temperature expressed in gram per cubic meter.
The point of this thread is that I was having a humidity issue at night and I was planning to lower it by increasing temperature of the room by heating the room with my wood pellet heating system.
I was having 60% at 67F and I wanted to get RH down to 50%.
In my case I have a descent ventilation, so humid air is constantly drawn into the building from outside. Increasing ventilation definitely doesn't lower humidity in the growroom. Increasing room temp by heating definitely lowers RH and these are the facts.
I have seen with my own eyes how RH drops when temperature is increased. That's why I started a thread to know if people approve my idea: http://rollitup.org/t/higher-temp-at-night.924991/page-2
Huckster79 calculated with an online calculator: if RH is 60% at 67F, then absolute humidity would be 9.8g per cubic meter, but if temp would be raised to 77F, then RH would drop to 42%, but absolute humidity would stay unchanged. It would be still 9.8g per cubic meter (Please give me the address of this calculator!).
This is a good example to explain what I've seen - a drop in RH, but thanks to Huckster79 now I know that humidity doesn't actually drop this way (absolute humidity).
Illinois Enema Bandit said that he doesn't see how a passive wood heating system is going to lower the humidity.
What would be the difference in passive vs active wood heating system and which one do I have?
Here comes the big question: Would absolute humidity REALLY stay the same if room is heated to higher temperature?
Doesn't heating lower humidity? We already know RH drops, but does absolute humidity also drop or not?
We all have felt it with our own body how when we heat the room (house or car or what ever), then at one point we feel how our eyes or mouth or nostril gets dry. We feel how air gets dry, don't we?
In my case I have a hot water calorifier as an output for the wood sourced heating system. It's basically like a radiator in cars, but in cars it serves a purpose of cooling as a radiator, but a calorifier is doing the opposite - heating.
Are you sure it's not reducing absolute humidity besides RH when it's heating the air? I'm asking, because I'm feeling with my own body how it dries the air. Wouldn't mold feel it too?
The main goal here is to reduce the risk of mold, but a dehumidifier is out of the topic. Please try to stay on the questions that I've raised!
Absolute humidity is the water content of air at a given temperature expressed in gram per cubic meter.
The point of this thread is that I was having a humidity issue at night and I was planning to lower it by increasing temperature of the room by heating the room with my wood pellet heating system.
I was having 60% at 67F and I wanted to get RH down to 50%.
In my case I have a descent ventilation, so humid air is constantly drawn into the building from outside. Increasing ventilation definitely doesn't lower humidity in the growroom. Increasing room temp by heating definitely lowers RH and these are the facts.
I have seen with my own eyes how RH drops when temperature is increased. That's why I started a thread to know if people approve my idea: http://rollitup.org/t/higher-temp-at-night.924991/page-2
Huckster79 calculated with an online calculator: if RH is 60% at 67F, then absolute humidity would be 9.8g per cubic meter, but if temp would be raised to 77F, then RH would drop to 42%, but absolute humidity would stay unchanged. It would be still 9.8g per cubic meter (Please give me the address of this calculator!).
This is a good example to explain what I've seen - a drop in RH, but thanks to Huckster79 now I know that humidity doesn't actually drop this way (absolute humidity).
Illinois Enema Bandit said that he doesn't see how a passive wood heating system is going to lower the humidity.
What would be the difference in passive vs active wood heating system and which one do I have?
Here comes the big question: Would absolute humidity REALLY stay the same if room is heated to higher temperature?
Doesn't heating lower humidity? We already know RH drops, but does absolute humidity also drop or not?
We all have felt it with our own body how when we heat the room (house or car or what ever), then at one point we feel how our eyes or mouth or nostril gets dry. We feel how air gets dry, don't we?
In my case I have a hot water calorifier as an output for the wood sourced heating system. It's basically like a radiator in cars, but in cars it serves a purpose of cooling as a radiator, but a calorifier is doing the opposite - heating.
Are you sure it's not reducing absolute humidity besides RH when it's heating the air? I'm asking, because I'm feeling with my own body how it dries the air. Wouldn't mold feel it too?
The main goal here is to reduce the risk of mold, but a dehumidifier is out of the topic. Please try to stay on the questions that I've raised!