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crawlspace temperature, humidity dblho39 06-11-2006
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Posted by Robert Gammon on June 12, 2006, 8:28 am
Joseph Meehan wrote:
> dblho39 wrote:
>
>> Does anybody know what a reasonable temperature for a crawlspace would
>> be? I recently put two dehumidifer units in my crawlspace (along with
>> a couple box fans to circulate air), as I've had major problems with
>> moisture down there. I have all the crawl space vents sealed.
>> However, the temperature in the crawlspace is now running about 8-10
>> degrees hotter than it had been. It was running around 68 degrees.
>> Now it is consistently up around 76-78 degrees. I guess this is
>> because the dehumidifers heat things up. The humidity level in the
>> crawlspace is now under control, the RH has been staying around 45-47%
>> (it had been running around 80-90%). But I'm concerned about the
>> temperature running higher. Is this anything I should worry about?
>> What would be the ideal temperature and RH for a crawlspace?
>>
>
> Temperature is up because you are adding heat. Those dehumidifiers make
> heat. Condensing water releases heat (A/C gets cold because it is
> evaporating something the part outside gets hot because it is condensing
> it.)
>
> Note: I would agree with the vapor barrier and with looking for the
> source of the moisture.
>
> Why did you close up the vents?
>
>
Yes indeed, ventilation of crawl space is IMPORTANT to the long term
health of the house, as is good drainage away from the perimeter of the
house. When it rains, no water should get under the house.


Real Goods Solar, Inc.
Posted by on June 12, 2006, 3:11 pm

>... ventilation of crawl space is IMPORTANT to the long term health
>of the house

And it can do more harm than good in summertime.

Nick


Posted by hallerb@aol.com on June 12, 2006, 3:23 pm

nicksanspam@ece.villanova.edu wrote:
>
> >... ventilation of crawl space is IMPORTANT to the long term health
> >of the house
>
> And it can do more harm than good in summertime.
>
> Nick

if the ventilation is adquate and a good vapor barrier is used
dehumidifers are unnecessary.

moisture naturally wants to go to where its less, so dehumidifying can
draw moisture to your area:(


Posted by on June 12, 2006, 6:07 pm

>moisture naturally wants to go to where its less, so dehumidifying can
>draw moisture to your area:(

But the dehumidified area will still be drier.

Nick


Posted by hallerb@aol.com on June 12, 2006, 7:21 pm

nicksanspam@ece.villanova.edu wrote:
>
> >moisture naturally wants to go to where its less, so dehumidifying can
> >draw moisture to your area:(
>
> But the dehumidified area will still be drier.
>
> Nick

At the large cost of electric heat buildup.

Is it really worth it?


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