Vettedrmr
Well-known member
Greetings, folks! Hope y'all had a happy Thanksgiving and are working towards a Merry Christmas!
About a year ago y'all helped me get the humidity under control in my under-house basement, and I wanted to give you a one year update. The old thread is here:
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=273317
This past spring was crazy, getting almost a year's worth of rain in 3 months. May was the worst, at 13 inches of rain. Under these "worst case" conditions, I found that a small underground stream forms in my basement from runoff. It literally comes from out of the middle of the foundation dirt (remember my house is built onto the side of a hill), runs down the inside of the vapor barrier, and onto the small concrete floor. While this is a real-life example, it’s so extreme as I’ll just deal with it the few times it happens, sucking up the water with a shop vac.
Once the deluge stopped, things started getting under control. I’ve sealed off the vents, and am running a Frigidaire 70 pint dehumidifier. I don’t have a sewage drain in the basement, so I’m draining the condensate into a 5 gallon bucket that I empty 1-2 times a day. It’s a bit of a pain, but it also allows me to measure its performance and just basically keep an eye on things. I’m trying to keep the relative humidity down to around 60%, which is dry enough to keep fungus and mold from developing. During the humid months of the year the dehumidifier runs essentially continuously, and pulls about 8 gallons of water out of the air daily, and manages to keep the relative humidity down into the high 60-low 70s (higher than I want but low enough to keep mold/fungus growth slowed way down). When the dewpoint comes down it drops down to 1-2 gallons a day as it regulates to 60% RH.
One other item to note: Last August we had to go out of town for about a week , so I had to turn off the dehumidifier, since I couldn’t empty the bucket. As is typical, we didn’t get any rain during that period, but the dewpoint was up into the 70s. When I got home and turned everything on, it was obvious the RH was WAY up, and my humidity monitor (a separate device) said the RH was 87%, and had peaked at around 90!
HTH, and have a good one,
Mike
About a year ago y'all helped me get the humidity under control in my under-house basement, and I wanted to give you a one year update. The old thread is here:
http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=273317
This past spring was crazy, getting almost a year's worth of rain in 3 months. May was the worst, at 13 inches of rain. Under these "worst case" conditions, I found that a small underground stream forms in my basement from runoff. It literally comes from out of the middle of the foundation dirt (remember my house is built onto the side of a hill), runs down the inside of the vapor barrier, and onto the small concrete floor. While this is a real-life example, it’s so extreme as I’ll just deal with it the few times it happens, sucking up the water with a shop vac.
Once the deluge stopped, things started getting under control. I’ve sealed off the vents, and am running a Frigidaire 70 pint dehumidifier. I don’t have a sewage drain in the basement, so I’m draining the condensate into a 5 gallon bucket that I empty 1-2 times a day. It’s a bit of a pain, but it also allows me to measure its performance and just basically keep an eye on things. I’m trying to keep the relative humidity down to around 60%, which is dry enough to keep fungus and mold from developing. During the humid months of the year the dehumidifier runs essentially continuously, and pulls about 8 gallons of water out of the air daily, and manages to keep the relative humidity down into the high 60-low 70s (higher than I want but low enough to keep mold/fungus growth slowed way down). When the dewpoint comes down it drops down to 1-2 gallons a day as it regulates to 60% RH.
One other item to note: Last August we had to go out of town for about a week , so I had to turn off the dehumidifier, since I couldn’t empty the bucket. As is typical, we didn’t get any rain during that period, but the dewpoint was up into the 70s. When I got home and turned everything on, it was obvious the RH was WAY up, and my humidity monitor (a separate device) said the RH was 87%, and had peaked at around 90!
HTH, and have a good one,
Mike


): You've grasped the problem of "solving the problem".