80% humidity while weed is drying??

Hello people, I cut down my plants yesterday and hung it all on strings most plants I cut each branch but a couple I hung by main stems, but the humidity seems to be staying at around 80% and the humidity meter is in the corner of the tent so it could be higher around all of the buds, I have a 10" oscilating fan in there to circulate the air around and I have a 4" fan/filter running aswell do you think this will cause bud rot? I was thinking of getting a dehumidifier today but If I can avoid it I will for now untill I next get paid.
Any inputs will be appreciated. Thankyou
They will dry at that rh at a high temp, but you open yourself up to all sorts of gnarly stuff (fungus/mold)if ur not lucky. Also by increasing temp to compensate for rh, you are not providing an ideal slow drying environment.
bottom line: You need a dehumidifier to get that humidity down so u dont lose all that hard work.
 
They will dry at that rh at a high temp, but you open yourself up to all sorts of gnarly stuff (fungus/mold)if ur not lucky. Also by increasing temp to compensate for rh, you are not providing an ideal slow drying environment.
bottom line: You need a dehumidifier to get that humidity down so u dont lose all that hard work.
Thanks, yea going to get one today any ideas on what capacity to get for a 4x4x7 tent?
 
Do you cure before freezing?
I make sure the jar is at 70% before freezing. Takes a month or so , depends on the ambient humidity. Sometimes I get flooded and it can take a year to completely dry things out under the house.

When I hang for the initial drying, I test for dryness by trying to break a small branch. It should not snap but the fiber should start to tear. If it snaps off it will be under 70%.
 
They will dry at that rh at a high temp, but you open yourself up to all sorts of gnarly stuff (fungus/mold)if ur not lucky. Also by increasing temp to compensate for rh, you are not providing an ideal slow drying environment.
bottom line: You need a dehumidifier to get that humidity down so u dont lose all that hard work.
Just bought one will have it set up in around an hour, thanks for the help
 
With dehumidifiers, just be sure you get one that utilizes compressors rather than the small thermo-electric dehumidifiers. I'd get one closer to 20-30 pints, 50 pint would probably be overkill. My homelabs dehumidifier has been run daily for the most part of a year and is going strong.
 
With dehumidifiers, just be sure you get one that utilizes compressors rather than the small thermo-electric dehumidifiers. I'd get one closer to 20-30 pints, 50 pint would probably be overkill. My homelabs dehumidifier has been run daily for the most part of a year and is going strong.
Thanks, when you said get one that utilizes compressors do you mean a non electric one because I have just bought this.
 

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Thanks, when you said get one that utilizes compressors do you mean a non electric one because I have just bought this.
How many watts does it pull? A thermo-electric dehumidifier doesn't use much electricity, a compressor model about that size will probably use 200-300 watts, which is why they work so well.
 
How many watts does it pull? A thermo-electric dehumidifier doesn't use much electricity, a compressor model about that size will probably use 200-300 watts, which is why they work so well.
It says on the box 300 watt but some were else it says 240volts aswell
 
Ok thanks again I think il just get a dehumidifier because I will use it in the future aswell just don't know what capacity to get, any ideas?
I'm not good with figuring that shit out. I got a 70 pint whole home dehuey. My place is about 1300 sq.ft. and it works great!
 
It's amps what you need to know. Amps x Volts = watts.

The compressor style are really AC units with the heat being kept in the room instead of blowing outside though the condenser.
 
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