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I'm seeing 63% and I'm wondering if that's high or normal for the area.
Thanks. |
| Normal |
We have a dehumidifier on our main floor right in front of the main return vent and its a struggle to keep it under 52% I hate humidity. |
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Normal.
When it’s this hot, I stay down about 50. The worst is when it’s humid but cool, so the a/c doesn’t run as much. |
| Mine gets as high as 80% at times in my garden level apartment. I have a good Frigidaire dehumidifier which can knock it down to 50% in about an hours time - it’s just amazing to me how much water it takes out of the air. |
| It is normal for the area but unhealthy according to the epa. We have to use a dehumidifier upstairs. |
I think “unhealthy” is a little extreme. |
| Ours used to hover around there, so we put a 50 pint portable dehumidifier in our basement that empties into the floor drain and keep it set to 55%. When that's on the house stays under ~58% upstairs all summer. |
| We set our thermostat to 52% humidity as a target. It's usually right around 50, but on really hot days like today the AC runs extra to get to 52%. I start to really notice it if it's over 58% - the air just feels thick to me. |
| 75%+ its insane. Gives me a migraine. |
| 53 in our 70+ year old rowhouse. Temp is 76, but set to 77 (hasn't come on yet today) |
umm, it creates an environment for mold. google it. |
| That's probably a tiny bit high. It's usually said that 40 - 60% is optimal for both comfort and for furniture. You can usually reduce humidity levels with room dehumidifiers, or with a whole-house dehumidifier, but the older and leakier the house the harder it will be to impact and the more energy it will take. |
+1 We have the same set up. Our stand alone dehumidifier is set to 50% and it's about that upstairs. It makes such a huge difference. |
| 50. When it goes over that. I feel sick. |