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The outside winter air is cold and dry. The inside winter air is dry.
Our chapped lips, dry skin and static zaps from doorknobs remind us of
that all season long. Homes like the dry environment, but dry air makes
people uncomfortable. While an ideal humidity for homes can be as low
as 5%, people prefer about 60% humidity. And because people are more
powerful than homes, we add humidifiers to have it our way.
Physics 101
If we asked Einstein
what he thought about humidity, he might have said, “It’s
all relative”. Of course, he said that
about everything. We typically talk about relative humidity
rather than absolute humidity. Relative humidity is the amount of water
vapour in
the air relative to how much vapour the air can hold before
it
condenses or rains. For example, a room with 4 pints of water
vapour may have a
relative humidity of 40%. This means we could have 10 pints
of water in the air before the relative humidity reaches 100% and
we get rain
or condensation.
The interesting part
is that if you cool down the air in a room but add no more water vapour,
the relative humidity
goes up. And, if you warm the air, the relative humidity
goes down.
This is
important
because the winter air outside is very cold and dry. When
we bring the winter air into our homes and warm it up,
we get really dry air in our
homes. For example, outdoor air with 80% relative humidity
at freezing temperatures will only have 20% relative humidity
when
we
warm it to
room temperature.
Do I need a humidifier?
If your house is
new, you may not have a humidifier. You may not need one because the
foundation and wood framing
are still drying out, releasing moisture into the air. Also,
new houses
are “tight”,
which means the air within them hangs around for a while
before being replaced by dry exterior air. It hangs around
long enough
to pick up
moisture from things like showers, cooking, drying clothes
and breathing. By comparison, old houses are drafty. Cold,
dry air
is creeping in all
the time, drying out the home as it flushes the warm
moist air out.
Do I have one?
If there is a small
box like the one in the picture hanging from the furnace or ductwork
beside the furnace with
a small electrical wire and a small water hose attached,
then YES.
You
may also
see the
humidistat,
a dial that looks like the thermostat but is used
to control the humidity level, and is often mounted to
the basement ductwork.
A drum type humidifier
has a tray of water with a sponge barrel or drum rotating through it.
The tray is
kept full with a float
switch, which allows water from the house plumbing
to enter the tray when the
water level drops. When the humidistat is turned
up or the humidity level drops, a small electric motor
rotates the sponge drum through
the tray,
absorbing water. Some of the air moving through
the ductwork
blows across the sponge, picking up moisture. This
moist air moves through the ducts
and into the rooms.

Cascade type humidifiers
have no tray of water. A small electric valve at the top controls the
water supply
to the humidifier. When the humidistat calls
for water, the
valve
opens, trickling
water down a honeycomb-like
metal pad. Air blows across the pad, picking
up moisture. Excess water is drained through a hose to
a
floor
drain, laundry
tub,
or condensate pump. What do I do?
If
you have a drum style unit, the tray of sitting
water is your nemesis. Ponding
water will cause scale build-up and
bacterial growth.
Every spring, the water supply pipe valve should be turned
off, the tray and sponge should be
cleaned, and the humidistat should be set
to OFF. In the fall, turn on the water valve, and set the
humidistat to 35%. We recommend a mid-winter
cleaning as well.
If
you have a cascade style unit, turn off the water
supply and turn the humidistat
to OFF in the spring. Before use in
the fall, remove
and soak the pad in de-scaling solution. If it is damaged
or too clogged to clean, the pad can
be replaced. Once the pad is
back in place, the
water supply pipe valve can be turned back on, and the humidistat
set to 35%. This unit will not need cleaning again until
next year.
How
much is too much?
As
we said, people like about 60% relative humidity.
Unfortunately, houses have
a hard time coping with this in cold
weather. Too little humidity makes people feel
uncomfortable.
Too much can cause
condensation,
mould, mildew, and rot as the warm moist air hits cool
surfaces. What confuses many people is
that as
the weather gets colder,
we have to
LOWER the humidistat setting, even though we want to
raise it. This is because the colder
it is outside, the easier
it is for condensation
to form on cool surfaces like windows. We can reduce
condensation by lowering the interior
humidity level.
| Outside |
Recommended
House Humidity |
| -20°F |
15% |
| -20°F
to -10°F |
20% |
| -10°F
to 0°F |
25% |
| 0°F
to +10°F |
35% |
| +10°F
and above |
40% |
| Summer
months Off |
Keeping
an eye on the amount
of condensation
on your windows is another great way
to gauge your
house humidity
level.
You can also track things with a room temperature
and
humidity monitor, available at hardware and building
supply stores.

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