It really depends on how well-insulated and airtight your house is. If there's not enough cooling load for the AC to run there won't be enough dehumidification. What a lot of people don't understand is there's no such thing as "standard" construction, houses can vary a lot -- like a factor of ten -- in how tightly they're built. Agree that sizing is also important. An oversized AC will have short run times which will tend to remove less humidity. |
What temperatures to they target sizing AC for? If we run it at 70 or so it keeps humidity down below 50 on a day like today, but at 75 degrees - humidity hits 60+ |
Dang. Totally read the OP wrong. Ignore me. |
What is your typical relative humidity from June-August? Our rooms run between 48%-54% all summer and that feels humid to me. |
That sounds fine. It's around a 55 degree dew point. Any dew point below 60 is nice to folks who grew up in the mid-atlantic.
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This is in relation to the outdoors. A humidity level of 60 in thr home creates a potentially toxic mold environment. This is the main reason some basements smell like absolute shit. |
| We live in a very humid coastal area, and we had whole house dehumidifiers installed on both floors (separate a/c units). $700 each sounds about right. Installation was easier on the one in the basement, as there was an existing return that could be used. The one in the attic required the installation of a new return. They work great and keep the humidity below 60% all summer long. |
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We have a whole house dehumidifier at our Florida house. It really only turns on if we are away and the AC is set at a higher temperature than normal. When we are here in Florida, we keep the AC set to 74 during the day and 70 at night. The AC takes care of the humidity as long as we keep the house cooler than about 80. It clicks on somewhere around there, depending on the outside temperature and humidity. It never turns on when we are at home.
At our NoVA house, we have a dehumidifier in the basement. The AC easily takes care of the humidity in Virginia. We don't even really need the basement unit. |