Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your house is dry in the winter it's because your house is leaky. Tight, modern houses don't have dryness problems. Sometimes they even need to be ventilated to shed humidity in the winter.
The long term fix is to find out where your house is leaking and plug the leaks.
Or, you don't have humidification in your heating system.
Anonymous wrote:If your house is dry in the winter it's because your house is leaky. Tight, modern houses don't have dryness problems. Sometimes they even need to be ventilated to shed humidity in the winter.
The long term fix is to find out where your house is leaking and plug the leaks.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds low. Yes, dry winter air can cause your problems.
I have a small one gallon steam humidifier that we run on low at night. It keeps the bedroom around 50% during the night, but that's at 66F so it's about right. It drops off during the day as the humidifier runs out of water and the setback themostat goes to 68F.
The ultrasonic humidifiers create an annoying dust from the dissolved salt/minerals in the water. The console humidifiers are a maintenance hassle.