Small industrial de-humidifier?.

Flowki

Well-Known Member
looking for a 20/30L per day de-huey with continues flow (uk). All the commercial stuff seems like cheap crap now, more emphasis on wifi bs than reliability.

I am looking for something that is very basic, continues flow and will also link up with an inkbird on/off humidity controller. Any idea on a decent commercial/industrial one?.
 

Cinco

Well-Known Member
I know it gets said a lot, but look used. I just picked up a 28l Whirlpool for my basement for $70, and it has continuous flow fitting for hose, and could be controlled by an inkbird (ie, it keeps its settings when the plug is pulled).

The Pro Breeze new ones on amazon are good too, continuous setting and hose, and able to be run by a controller. I helped someone else in the UK set one up. 200 gbp for a 20l.

They aren’t commercial units, but for only 20-30l a day you don’t need one.
 

VEGASHEFF420

New Member
looking for a 20/30L per day de-huey with continues flow (uk). All the commercial stuff seems like cheap crap now, more emphasis on wifi bs than reliability.

I am looking for something that is very basic, continues flow and will also link up with an inkbird on/off humidity controller. Any idea on a decent commercial/industrial one?.
 

VEGASHEFF420

New Member
I bought one on Amazon for 30 bucks and it keeps it down to 35-45% perfect for flowering. It stays on all the time and collects the water I dump every week. It's small. But very efficient. Also has air filters. I'll try to find the link
 

VEGASHEFF420

New Member
Sevon. Great value dehumidifier. It's small and on Amazon for 30 bucks ish. It works great in my 6X10 and it's an air cleaner too. I just leave it on during flowering.
 

Renfro

Well-Known Member
Meh... i guess small references size and industrial implies a more durable grade of a product.

That make sense?? I'm high....lol
Well industrial is rarely small. lol Industrial strength is a good thing but industrial size isn't gonna work. Honestly on the size he mentions I don't know any company that makes something for other than home use.
 

Keesje

Well-Known Member
I know it gets said a lot, but look used. I just picked up a 28l Whirlpool for my basement for $70, and it has continuous flow fitting for hose, and could be controlled by an inkbird (ie, it keeps its settings when the plug is pulled).

The Pro Breeze new ones on amazon are good too, continuous setting and hose, and able to be run by a controller. I helped someone else in the UK set one up. 200 gbp for a 20l.

They aren’t commercial units, but for only 20-30l a day you don’t need one.
I assume these are the numbers listed in the manual. These are usually based on ideal circumstances.
How many liters do you actually get from the air per day?
 

Cinco

Well-Known Member
I assume these are the numbers listed in the manual. These are usually based on ideal circumstances.
How many liters do you actually get from the air per day?
They will pull basically what they say, per day, as a max. At a given (higher, grow appropriate) temp.

How long is a piece of string?

My flower room (144 sq ft) dehumidifier drains the same as my washer, so I do not monitor, but a 50 pint is Just enough to keep my room at 40% relative humidity at 28c if wanted during the summer. In Canada. I’d go much larger in a very humid environment.
 

Flowki

Well-Known Member
THIS was something like what I had in mind, with a basic on/off as to use with inbird. It would probably pull 20L a day at 80F but look at it.. no nonsense BS like most of the flashy yet cheap built new stuff with led/wifi and other such shit. Prob is I can't get reviews on it since it's not your average appliance, it's loud too, no mention of W use either.

THIS is about as close as I was able to track down for what appears to be reliability in mind, not flashy bs, not sure if it will work with the inkbird, hoping so. Still open to any suggestions. This one is rated at 21L but I guess realistically it will only be about 15.
 

Cinco

Well-Known Member
First one looks great. You will not regret an industrial humidifier, and losing even a few ounces to bud rot pays for the damn thing.

I am cheap because I only grow my own medicine now, and do not have humidity issues often where I live in Canada. But even then — if I had any doubt my dehueys were adequate I wouldn’t hesitate to drop the cash. Medicine is money.
 
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Cinco

Well-Known Member
THIS was something like what I had in mind, with a basic on/off as to use with inbird. It would probably pull 20L a day at 80F but look at it.. no nonsense BS like most of the flashy yet cheap built new stuff with led/wifi and other such shit. Prob is I can't get reviews on it since it's not your average appliance, it's loud too, no mention of W use either.

THIS is about as close as I was able to track down for what appears to be reliability in mind, not flashy bs, not sure if it will work with the inkbird, hoping so. Still open to any suggestions. This one is rated at 21L but I guess realistically it will only be about 15.
However, if money were an issue, I would try this one first. https://www.amazon.co.uk/Pro-Dehumidifier-Humidity-Continuous-Drainage/dp/B077GZ3TVS/
 

Keesje

Well-Known Member
If money were an issue, some people might think about not getting the RH that low.
Someone above mentions "I bought one on Amazon for 30 bucks and it keeps it down to 35-45% perfect for flowering"
Those numbers would only be good when your room temperature is not that high. Below 24 C / 75 F.
 

Flowki

Well-Known Member
I tried the second one and it only removes 200mil per hour and that was near it's ''optimal conditions''. Not even 5L a day compared to it's so called 18L. Either faulty is fuck or complete lies, lets hope for a refund. I could remove more water with a straw and a sponge.

The industrial one would be more ideal but the noise level is a complete put off, almost twice as loud as a typical house hold huey. But it's industrial what did I expect ^^.

Will check out some more stuff, probably looks like you are right, Amazon.

If money were an issue, some people might think about not getting the RH that low.
Someone above mentions "I bought one on Amazon for 30 bucks and it keeps it down to 35-45% perfect for flowering"
Those numbers would only be good when your room temperature is not that high. Below 24 C / 75 F.
Where I am has fast changing humidity conditions. Can be under 50% one day and over 75% the next, not unusual to be within the same day. The lows are easy to manage just by watering every day to bump up rh. The highs, with natural humidity ontop of respiration is a battle.
 
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