krisway
Well-known member
I'm wondering if I have something done wrong. First here are the details:
-I live in Newfoundland, on the east coast of Canada.
-garage is 16x36, 576 sq/ft, with concrete floor
-insulated walls and ceiling
-vented eve and vented roof
-walls sheeted over with non painted 1/2" plywood
-three heaters totalling 5500watts
-Dec to May garaged heated and kept at 10*c
This time of year is damp and the humidity is high in the garage. Without a dehumidifier I've seen it reach over 80%. I bought a dehumidifier that is sufficient for the square footage and I use it periodically. But the garage still ranges between 60-70%. Is this still too high? I do see some black mould on the plywood, but not sure when this started to form....maybe last year before I had a dehumidifier. Basically I don't want to see this mould getting any worse.
-Do I have something not done properly with venting?
-Should I run the dehumidifier more often to keep the humidity at a certain level?
-What should the level of humidity be?
-Should my walls be painted?
Any suggestion? Thanks.
-I live in Newfoundland, on the east coast of Canada.
-garage is 16x36, 576 sq/ft, with concrete floor
-insulated walls and ceiling
-vented eve and vented roof
-walls sheeted over with non painted 1/2" plywood
-three heaters totalling 5500watts
-Dec to May garaged heated and kept at 10*c
This time of year is damp and the humidity is high in the garage. Without a dehumidifier I've seen it reach over 80%. I bought a dehumidifier that is sufficient for the square footage and I use it periodically. But the garage still ranges between 60-70%. Is this still too high? I do see some black mould on the plywood, but not sure when this started to form....maybe last year before I had a dehumidifier. Basically I don't want to see this mould getting any worse.
-Do I have something not done properly with venting?
-Should I run the dehumidifier more often to keep the humidity at a certain level?
-What should the level of humidity be?
-Should my walls be painted?
Any suggestion? Thanks.

Is this common where you are? If so, ventilation alone won't do it. You have three choices to reduce the indoor relative humidity: increase the temperature inside your shop, run a dehumidifier all winter, both.