HoosierBuddy
Well-known member
So....Not an issue...just a story and feel free to post if you have any thoughts on this.
Years ago, I put an Aprilaire 400 humidifier on my NG furnace. This is the "water saving" model which I bought after a lot of thought. The way it works is kind of unique. When there is a heat call and the humidistat is not satisfied then the water valve kicks open and water flows through a 1/4" line into a water diverter that creates a waterfall over a pad. The water runs down the pad into a sump. The sump has float switches that will eventually turn off the water when the sump is full. At that point, the hot air bypassed through the pad rapidly dries the pad and water is supposed to wick back up into the pad from the sump to keep it moist. Eventually the sump water level drops down, the float switch reports this and the water valve reopens.
Does it work? No not really. The pad doesn't wick water up out of the sump worth a darn. The sump remains full. The float switch is satisfied. The valve never opens to put more water on the pad.
Does it save water? Absolutely! It doesn't use a pint a day probably. But that's not a feature really, more of a design flaw.
So, I didn't worry about it until the wife started having repeated nose bleeds. Humidity in our bedroom in recent cold snaps hovered around 20%.
I bought the manual version of the Aprilaire 600 a couple of weeks ago. It installed right in the same hole that I took the 400 out of. The 600 is the traditional water guzzling unit. It doesn't have a sump. It doesn't have float switches. I wired it up so if there is a fan call, and the manual humidistat is not satisfied, it energizes the valve and runs water into the top of the humidifier pad until the fan call ends.
During the current cold snap humidity in our bedroom is hovering around 30% and no nosebleeds.
BUT....when you look at the clear tube leaving the humidifier during operation, it has a steady stream of water heading to the drain. The water/sewer rates in my town are horrendous. Our water/sewer is well over $100 every month.
So...I bought a 1/4" Control Needle valve off Amazon for $9 and have been "tuning" it so that I get some flow during a heat call into the drain, but maybe about 1/3 as much as I did with no control valve.
It seems to work. I'm not 100% sure yet...
I can report for sure that replacing the "water saver" humidifier with the standard type works a whole lot better. Probably not a surprise to anyone.
Phil
Years ago, I put an Aprilaire 400 humidifier on my NG furnace. This is the "water saving" model which I bought after a lot of thought. The way it works is kind of unique. When there is a heat call and the humidistat is not satisfied then the water valve kicks open and water flows through a 1/4" line into a water diverter that creates a waterfall over a pad. The water runs down the pad into a sump. The sump has float switches that will eventually turn off the water when the sump is full. At that point, the hot air bypassed through the pad rapidly dries the pad and water is supposed to wick back up into the pad from the sump to keep it moist. Eventually the sump water level drops down, the float switch reports this and the water valve reopens.
Does it work? No not really. The pad doesn't wick water up out of the sump worth a darn. The sump remains full. The float switch is satisfied. The valve never opens to put more water on the pad.
Does it save water? Absolutely! It doesn't use a pint a day probably. But that's not a feature really, more of a design flaw.
So, I didn't worry about it until the wife started having repeated nose bleeds. Humidity in our bedroom in recent cold snaps hovered around 20%.
I bought the manual version of the Aprilaire 600 a couple of weeks ago. It installed right in the same hole that I took the 400 out of. The 600 is the traditional water guzzling unit. It doesn't have a sump. It doesn't have float switches. I wired it up so if there is a fan call, and the manual humidistat is not satisfied, it energizes the valve and runs water into the top of the humidifier pad until the fan call ends.
During the current cold snap humidity in our bedroom is hovering around 30% and no nosebleeds.
BUT....when you look at the clear tube leaving the humidifier during operation, it has a steady stream of water heading to the drain. The water/sewer rates in my town are horrendous. Our water/sewer is well over $100 every month.
So...I bought a 1/4" Control Needle valve off Amazon for $9 and have been "tuning" it so that I get some flow during a heat call into the drain, but maybe about 1/3 as much as I did with no control valve.
It seems to work. I'm not 100% sure yet...
I can report for sure that replacing the "water saver" humidifier with the standard type works a whole lot better. Probably not a surprise to anyone.
Phil