Whole house dehumidifier: How does it work

Meast21

Well-Known Member
Probably not. You must have a source of moisture unless it is very humid outside. You need to weatherize the basement
Fucking ground has been saturated for 2.5 months bc of rain.. When we had lower freezing temps a few weeks ago the humidity would go back to 50%... Its 55% now in the basement with rain outside.
 

Nizza

Well-Known Member
Fucking ground has been saturated for 2.5 months bc of rain.. When we had lower freezing temps a few weeks ago the humidity would go back to 50%... Its 55% now in the basement with rain outside.
You can oversize the dehu for the cu ft of the basement but the best way to approach it would be dry-lok everything. The amount of energy savings will be worth it, and then you can grow down there.

if you already have the dehu, I would clean the basement and dylok it . After you weatherize the basement you can decide on what to de for dehumidification
 

ComfortCreator

Well-Known Member
It sounds to me like the basement does not have any vents or returns. Stagnant even when the heat runs.

I guess this because in a cold climate, the outside air holds so little water that your home should be more like 30% humidity or less as it gets really cold unless you are humidifying the air.

If this is true then you need vents and or a return there to move the air.
 

Meast21

Well-Known Member
do you have crawl spaces that are sand or anything that would seem to add moisture?
No... Like I said I get no standing water.. Before I had the dehumifier down there the cinder block walls would have a little moisture on them.
 

thefullspectrum

Well-Known Member
55% humidity is not a problem with enough air movement using fans and air replenishment via external intake and extraction. Re-circulating that same stagnant air is a problem.
 

Meast21

Well-Known Member
It sounds to me like the basement does not have any vents or returns. Stagnant even when the heat runs.

I guess this because in a cold climate, the outside air holds so little water that your home should be more like 30% humidity or less as it gets really cold unless you are humidifying the air.

If this is true then you need vents and or a return there to move the air.
I have (3) 6" vents off the furnace. Whenever the AC or heat is on air gets blown into the basement...
 

ComfortCreator

Well-Known Member
Is there a whole home humidifier running? 3 vents providing dry hot air to the basement should dry it out big time. Something is amiss here for sure.

Example: At 40f and 90% humidity (let's say its above freezing and raining)...
When that air is heated to 60f, the rh becomes 45%. I would guess you heat above that...at 70f , that air is roughly 30%.

As it gets colder than 40f, the rh goes even lower. That is the "tell" that moisture is in the air from some other source.

30f outside with 90% humidity = 30% at 60f, and even lower at 70f.
 

Nizza

Well-Known Member
If you think the only problem was water getting into your basement and it isn't going to happen again I would clean up, put the tent on pallets, and add a moisture/ temperature data logger. Inkbird sells one for wicked cheap I think it's only 20$ and that will give you a graph of what went on every minute of the day. Most of the time you get humidity spikes when the lights turn off

50% should be fine, as long as you don't take on more water. I'd sterilize if possible. It would be expensive but if it were me , after doing the grade and gutters outside I would go ahead and drylok the basement if u think there is still an issue. Remember to clean your dehumidifier it can get very gross and be a source of mold
 
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