RH problems

GreenPeace22

Active Member
I DON'T GET IT! I just cannot understand RH at all, my mind is blowing...
Warm air holds more humidity, right? So if temperature goes up, RH goes up. Then why when lights go off RH goes up by as much as 15%?
Today my RH with lights on was 56%, as soon as lights went off RH went up to 64%, aaaaaaand, aaaand, the moment I put a circulating fan in the tent for air movement RH goes up even further to 73%, what the hell?

Can someone, please, explain me how RH works cause I'm going nuts trying to figure out how to control my RH, especially to lower it.

I'm growing in a 2x2 grow tent, with a 140W light, my intake is more than enough, as my tent walls are sucked in very hard, still my RH won't go lower than 55%. The room where the tent is located (the outside environment) has an RH of 73%. Even if I open the windows during the day the room RH won't go down, because that's the outside conditions as well. (it's fall, and it's rainy) WHAT CAN I DO? I'm in week 3 of flower, If I don't find a way soon, well, we all know what's going to happen...

Also, I wouldn't want to use a dehumidifier, maybe only as a last resort...
 
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Dr. Who

Well-Known Member
I DON'T GET IT! I just cannot understand RH at all, my mind is blowing...
Warm air holds more humidity, right? So if temperature goes up, RH goes up. Then why when lights go off RH goes up by as much as 15%?
Today my RH with lights on was 56%, as soon as lights went off RH went up to 64%, aaaaaaand, aaaand, the moment I put a circulating fan in the tent for air movement RH goes up even further to 73%, what the hell?

Can someone, please, explain me how RH works cause I'm going nuts trying to figure out how to control my RH, especially to lower it.

I'm growing in a 2x2 grow tent, with a 140W light, my intake is more than enough, as my tent walls are sucked in very hard, still my RH won't go lower than 55%. The room where the tent is located (the outside environment) has an RH of 73%. Even if I open the windows during the day the room RH won't go down, because that's the outside conditions as well. (it's fall, and it's rainy) WHAT CAN I DO? I'm in week 3 of flower, If I don't find a way soon, well, we all know what's going to happen...

Also, I wouldn't want to use a dehumidifier, maybe only as a last resort...
The "why/How" your looking for is based it the fact that the room RH is 73% and your trying to control a tent IN that space and RH...

LOWER/CONTROL THE ROOM'S RH !!! THAT is how to control the tent's basic RH issues...
I suspect that when your tent power goes off. It does not exhaust?

You have to keep moving air in and out off your tent by exhausting regularly/continuously - take your pick.
STILL! It will not get lower then the RH feeding the tent by the area it's in!
UNLESS you control that area's RH!

Dehumidify the ROOM and use the collected water.
 

bluemagicman

Well-Known Member
Found this online and just about what i was going to say relating to plant transpiration, not shitting on you but everyone on here should have a basic understanding of how plants operate.

"Plants transpire water at significant rates during the night [8,9]. ... Plants loose water at significant rates during the night through 'night-time transpiration'. Night-time transpirational water loss is most likely the consequence of having respiratory CO2 escape at sufficiently high rates through stomata."

But yeah just drop your RH and get better ventilation.
 

Richard Drysift

Well-Known Member
Last resort....you need a dehumidifier. Plants in a small space sweat; that’s growing indoors. Adding a dehumidifier will help but high RH is not as big a problem as high temps. Stop looking so much at your hygrometer and pay closer attention to the thermometer. The only alternative to a dehumidifier is running an a/c.
 

GreenPeace22

Active Member
The "why/How" your looking for is based it the fact that the room RH is 73% and your trying to control a tent IN that space and RH...

LOWER/CONTROL THE ROOM'S RH !!! THAT is how to control the tent's basic RH issues...
I suspect that when your tent power goes off. It does not exhaust?

You have to keep moving air in and out off your tent by exhausting regularly/continuously - take your pick.
STILL! It will not get lower then the RH feeding the tent by the area it's in!
UNLESS you control that area's RH!

Dehumidify the ROOM and use the collected water.
Thanks for your time! My exhaust is running 24/7
 

GreenPeace22

Active Member
Found this online and just about what i was going to say relating to plant transpiration, not shitting on you but everyone on here should have a basic understanding of how plants operate.

"Plants transpire water at significant rates during the night [8,9]. ... Plants loose water at significant rates during the night through 'night-time transpiration'. Night-time transpirational water loss is most likely the consequence of having respiratory CO2 escape at sufficiently high rates through stomata."

But yeah just drop your RH and get better ventilation.
Thanks for the advice, but if I get a better ventilation than I already have my tent will collapse.
 

GreenPeace22

Active Member
Last resort....you need a dehumidifier. Plants in a small space sweat; that’s growing indoors. Adding a dehumidifier will help but high RH is not as big a problem as high temps. Stop looking so much at your hygrometer and pay closer attention to the thermometer. The only alternative to a dehumidifier is running an a/c.
Temps are 70-85F, night and day, never lower, never higher. The humidity is my concern, I don't want bud rot
 

Dougnsalem

Well-Known Member
I DON'T GET IT! I just cannot understand RH at all, my mind is blowing...
Warm air holds more humidity, right? So if temperature goes up, RH goes up. Then why when lights go off RH goes up by as much as 15%?
Today my RH with lights on was 56%, as soon as lights went off RH went up to 64%, aaaaaaand, aaaand, the moment I put a circulating fan in the tent for air movement RH goes up even further to 73%, what the hell?

Can someone, please, explain me how RH works cause I'm going nuts trying to figure out how to control my RH, especially to lower it.

I'm growing in a 2x2 grow tent, with a 140W light, my intake is more than enough, as my tent walls are sucked in very hard, still my RH won't go lower than 55%. The room where the tent is located (the outside environment) has an RH of 73%. Even if I open the windows during the day the room RH won't go down, because that's the outside conditions as well. (it's fall, and it's rainy) WHAT CAN I DO? I'm in week 3 of flower, If I don't find a way soon, well, we all know what's going to happen...

Also, I wouldn't want to use a dehumidifier, maybe only as a last resort...
+1 on the OP, just for the enthusiasm alone! That was an entertaining read. Don't stress too much, and pull a bunch of hair out; or you'll be bald like me..... Lol
 

HydroKid239

Well-Known Member
Temps are 70-85F, night and day, never lower, never higher. The humidity is my concern, I don't want bud rot
put an AC in the room the tent is in. Or dehumidifier. Also Only water when the lights come on. Not before lights out. That's asking for it.
My plants ph dropped so I flushed til I got 6.5 out the run off. Down to 330ppm. Unbalanced feeding caused a lockout. Lesson learned.
Had to flush with 3hrs left of daylight. So I have the dehu in the tent and the ac running on low.
 

GreenPeace22

Active Member
put an AC in the room the tent is in. Or dehumidifier. Also Only water when the lights come on. Not before lights out. That's asking for it.
My plants ph dropped so I flushed til I got 6.5 out the run off. Down to 330ppm. Unbalanced feeding caused a lockout. Lesson learned.
Had to flush with 3hrs left of daylight. So I have the dehu in the tent and the ac running on low.
Thanks for your time, I think that I'll have to use a dehumidifier after all. I already only water when lights go on, never before they go out, and I grow in living soil with organic nutrients, so for me flushing, pH adjusting or PPM checking are not necessary.
 

RadicalRoss

Well-Known Member
I DON'T GET IT! I just cannot understand RH at all, my mind is blowing...
Warm air holds more humidity, right? So if temperature goes up, RH goes up. Then why when lights go off RH goes up by as much as 15%?
Today my RH with lights on was 56%, as soon as lights went off RH went up to 64%, aaaaaaand, aaaand, the moment I put a circulating fan in the tent for air movement RH goes up even further to 73%, what the hell?

Can someone, please, explain me how RH works cause I'm going nuts trying to figure out how to control my RH, especially to lower it.

I'm growing in a 2x2 grow tent, with a 140W light, my intake is more than enough, as my tent walls are sucked in very hard, still my RH won't go lower than 55%. The room where the tent is located (the outside environment) has an RH of 73%. Even if I open the windows during the day the room RH won't go down, because that's the outside conditions as well. (it's fall, and it's rainy) WHAT CAN I DO? I'm in week 3 of flower, If I don't find a way soon, well, we all know what's going to happen...

Also, I wouldn't want to use a dehumidifier, maybe only as a last resort...
Your assumptions about how RH and temperature are related aren't correct.

As temperature rises, the air has the capacity to hold more water. The same amount of water is in the air. This leads to a decrease in the relative humidity.

When temperature falls, the air can hold less water. Therefore the same amount of water in the air results in a higher relative humidity.
 

Richard Drysift

Well-Known Member
Temps are 70-85F, night and day, never lower, never higher. The humidity is my concern, I don't want bud rot
Nobody does; you will always be fighting things like humidity; it gets better/worse depending upon the weather. Im saying if you can just keep temps pretty much where they are and have good circulation bud rot shouldn’t be a major problem.
If you have mold issues it will happen late in flowering. It has happened to all of us sooner or later but it’s not something that occurs if you are always mitigating against it with prevention like a dehumidifier, fans, and ducted exhaust. Adding an a/c is another option but one that you could employ if needed during a spell of high humidity in your area.
I say this because the last time a plant in our garden got bud rot it was because the power went off for 5 days in August. One plant I had pulled and planned to trim and hang the next day. As it happened I never got back to it until lights were back on. It was elevated on a milk crate but also standing over in a puddle of water due to some basement flooding. We have stone foundation; water can sweat right through if the ground is saturated. Anyway my point is a hurricane caused all of this; not the RH of the grow rooms. It typically is 45-55% on a normal day and higher during summer months. We run a central a/c when it’s real hot but it’s off most of the year. Don’t worry about bud rot so much; you’ll know when it’s too steamy not to try and lower the ambient humidity when/if you can.
 

GreenPeace22

Active Member
Nobody does; you will always be fighting things like humidity; it gets better/worse depending upon the weather. Im saying if you can just keep temps pretty much where they are and have good circulation bud rot shouldn’t be a major problem.
If you have mold issues it will happen late in flowering. It has happened to all of us sooner or later but it’s not something that occurs if you are always mitigating against it with prevention like a dehumidifier, fans, and ducted exhaust. Adding an a/c is another option but one that you could employ if needed during a spell of high humidity in your area.
I say this because the last time a plant in our garden got bud rot it was because the power went off for 5 days in August. One plant I had pulled and planned to trim and hang the next day. As it happened I never got back to it until lights were back on. It was elevated on a milk crate but also standing over in a puddle of water due to some basement flooding. We have stone foundation; water can sweat right through if the ground is saturated. Anyway my point is a hurricane caused all of this; not the RH of the grow rooms. It typically is 45-55% on a normal day and higher during summer months. We run a central a/c when it’s real hot but it’s off most of the year. Don’t worry about bud rot so much; you’ll know when it’s too steamy not to try and lower the ambient humidity when/if you can.
Thanks for your positive feedback! Much appreciated! My humidity levels still are in the 60s, but my ventilation is good, hope you are right and mold won't be an issues...
 

HydroKid239

Well-Known Member
Thanks for your positive feedback! Much appreciated! My humidity levels still are in the 60s, but my ventilation is good, hope you are right and mold won't be an issues...
You can spend a few bucks and get both dehu & humidifier in there on controllers to save the stress of running into an issue.
 

Bukvičák

Well-Known Member
I think it works like this... It is Relative Humidity and it is just counted of some math form of actual and absolute humidity. When you put these two humidities into other form you can count further and end up with form where RH fluctuation depends only on temperature changing. I can not explain it good in English but the result is like this. You have a room with air which has specific amount of water inside and temperature. RH depends only on temp (when there is same amount of water in the air). When the temp goes higher your RH goes lower but with completely same amount of water in the air. Problem is, when the lights go off and and temperature drops. Than your RH rising high plus that extra water from plant respiration.
 

HydroKid239

Well-Known Member
I think it works like this... It is Relative Humidity and it is just counted of some math form of actual and absolute humidity. When you put these two humidities into other form you can count further and end up with form where RH fluctuation depends only on temperature changing. I can not explain it good in English but the result is like this. You have a room with air which has specific amount of water inside and temperature. RH depends only on temp (when there is same amount of water in the air). When the temp goes higher your RH goes lower but with completely same amount of water in the air. Problem is, when the lights go off and and temperature drops. Than your RH rising high plus that extra water from plant respiration.
This is why I smoke weed..
 
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