high humidity in my house

would anyone have answer to high humidity in chilled water high velocity system what can i do to get humidity from 65 to 45-50
Comments
-
Is that percent relative humidity? And at what space temperature? And how many air changes per hour?
The idea will be to get the dew point of the supply air low enough. If the air temperature is 70 and you want 45 percent relative humidity, you need to chill the air to below 48 F and then reheat it.
Br. Jamie, osb
Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England0 -
Slow down the airflow to drop the supply air temp. How long are the cooling cycles? What is the supply and chill water temps?
0 -
-
-
this for Jamie
yes that is 65 RH
Space temp is at 72
i have an hrv that's doing 110 cfm for air change in a two level house with 1300 sq ft per level the HRV is dumping fresh air into the return 6 feet before the cooling coil and the HRV exhaust to outside is 3 feet before the fresh air also into the return air a hvac.
i had next to no condensation of off my chilled water coil until i cranked down my air flow through coil and dropped the chilled water temp to 32 degrees Fahrenheit (which is kind of low) i am reheating also but than the hvac is not quite keeping up what do you recommend i have the reheat temp it is a hydronic hot water coil
also i am afraid i am putting excess moisture into my ducts and creating mold with reheat is that possible?
0 -
this for HVACNUT
It is a new house and to my opinion very tight house
as for oversized i am not sure but i know my basement needs next to no air conditioning so when the chilled water is going the basement damper is closed it is a vfd operated hi-velocity system which claim you want 1100 to 1200 fpm per minute out of every diffuser in the house which is in my opinion to high (but not scared to be proven wrong)i have it cranked back to 950 fpm and than can bring the RH down only to 55-58 so wondering what you mean with oversized could that be an issue?
0 -
Not in a position to run all the numbers right now, but that HRV isn't helping you a bit. Consider: all the moisture it is bringing in from outside gets into your inside air unless it is taken out on the cooling coils.
You want to crank that chiller coil as low as it can safely go — and since it is water, 32 is it. Then crank up the air flow in the return (not the HRV) and the chiller power to run as much air as you can to get a discharge air temperature from the coil not higher than 40 (lower will be better)..
Br. Jamie, osb
Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England1 -
-
This is true — but in a colder season, the latent heat recovery benefit of an ERV is more than offset by the potential for poorer (maybe much poorer) indoor air quality, and you can't just switch the operating mode from one to the other — they are very different beasts.
Br. Jamie, osb
Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England1
Categories
- All Categories
- 87K THE MAIN WALL
- 3.2K A-C, Heat Pumps & Refrigeration
- 58 Biomass
- 426 Carbon Monoxide Awareness
- 116 Chimneys & Flues
- 2.1K Domestic Hot Water
- 5.7K Gas Heating
- 109 Geothermal
- 160 Indoor-Air Quality
- 3.6K Oil Heating
- 70 Pipe Deterioration
- 994 Plumbing
- 6.3K Radiant Heating
- 389 Solar
- 15.4K Strictly Steam
- 3.4K Thermostats and Controls
- 54 Water Quality
- 44 Industry Classes
- 48 Job Opportunities
- 18 Recall Announcements