Talk of The Villages Florida - View Single Post - Indoor humidity above 70%
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Old 08-25-2024, 08:43 AM
ehonour ehonour is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ton80 View Post
I think you have it wrong.
A dewpoint of 60F means that moisture forms on surfaces in your home at 60F. This is uncomfortable and has a relative humidity of 100 % which is high mold condition.

A relative humidity of 60 % means that the water content in the air in that house is 60% of the maximum water content that the air at that temperature can hold.
Ton80 has it mostly right. His definition of dewpoint is correct.

However, a dewpoint number makes no sense at all unless you also know the actual temperature, because what matters is the difference between temperature and dew point. If the difference is zero, as in his example (i.e temp=60 deg and dp=60 deg), then you have water condensing on surfaces. In that condition, the relative humidity is 100%; the air is holding all the water it can possibly hold.

You can have temperature of 105 deg and dewpoint of 80 deg and still feel very dry, with the sweat rapidly evaporating from your skin. (RH of 46%) Or temp of 40 deg and dewpoint of 40 deg and feel oppressively humid. (RH of 100%)

What matters for comfort is relative humidity, not dewpoint.

Concerning the OP question, an indoor RH of over 70% is pretty high. It's not yet mold territory, but something's not right.