logan176
Jan 14, 2015, 07:13 PM
I think I'm having a humidity problem in my house. Before making any changes, like installing a whole house humidifier, I'm trying to collect data. Here is what I have so far.
Background
My house is a Cape Cod style home with an attic that was converted to a second floor. My home is located in southern New York in zone 5a. The main floor is insulated with R13 batts and upstairs is insulated with Icynene open-cell spray foam. I have a Goodman high efficiency, forced hot air furnace with one zone that heats both floors. The furnace is seven years old. Usually both floors are heated to within two degrees of each other.
Every window was upgraded to double-pane Anderson 400 series seven years ago. With the exception of the unfinished basement with drafty windows, the rest of the house is sealed up pretty tight. The only time we ever see condensation on the windows is when we take a shower or we are boiling water in the kitchen. The only windows that will show a small amount of condensation are the windows in those rooms.
I suffer from sinus problems, but those issues extend back prior to us buying this house. My wife feels fine. My 4-year-old daughter doesn't know any better, but she is in good health.
Data
Indoor temperature and humidity data was collected using Acurite digital indoor thermometers purchased from a big-box store about 4 years ago. I have two thermometers so I can compare the temps on both floors, apples to apples.
Indoor humidity usually stays in the 20s. It drops as low as 16%, when the furnace kicks on after we've been at work all day. When the furnace has been set to 60 degrees all day and then goes to 68 degrees at 4:00, this is the only time I see a big difference between the upstairs and downstairs temps. When this happens, the upstairs temps can climb to 76 degrees. If it's raining outside, I've seen the indoor humidity reach 48%.
Based on what I've read online, comfortable indoor humidity should be around 40% during the winter. With numbers as low as 16% in my daughter's room, we have been using a cool mist humidifier to keep the levels around 35% at night.
What is really confusing me are the numbers I'm seeing tonight:
Daughter's room w/o humidifier
Temp: 68 degrees
Humidity: 16%
Daughter's room after humidifier turned on
Temp: 68 degrees
Humidity: 35%
Outside data with Acurite indoor thermometer
Temp: 27 degrees
Humidity: 16%
WeatherBug App
Temp: 19 degrees
Humidity: 86%
Dew point: 15 degrees
Weather.gov
Temp: 23 degrees
Humidity: 68%
Dew point: 14 degrees
I don't understand why there are such differences in the humidity readings. Based on the data I've collected, do you guys think I need to install a humidifier? If so, what type would you recommend and why? I really want to get this right, especially because I don't want anything to happen to my daughter.
Thanks.
Background
My house is a Cape Cod style home with an attic that was converted to a second floor. My home is located in southern New York in zone 5a. The main floor is insulated with R13 batts and upstairs is insulated with Icynene open-cell spray foam. I have a Goodman high efficiency, forced hot air furnace with one zone that heats both floors. The furnace is seven years old. Usually both floors are heated to within two degrees of each other.
Every window was upgraded to double-pane Anderson 400 series seven years ago. With the exception of the unfinished basement with drafty windows, the rest of the house is sealed up pretty tight. The only time we ever see condensation on the windows is when we take a shower or we are boiling water in the kitchen. The only windows that will show a small amount of condensation are the windows in those rooms.
I suffer from sinus problems, but those issues extend back prior to us buying this house. My wife feels fine. My 4-year-old daughter doesn't know any better, but she is in good health.
Data
Indoor temperature and humidity data was collected using Acurite digital indoor thermometers purchased from a big-box store about 4 years ago. I have two thermometers so I can compare the temps on both floors, apples to apples.
Indoor humidity usually stays in the 20s. It drops as low as 16%, when the furnace kicks on after we've been at work all day. When the furnace has been set to 60 degrees all day and then goes to 68 degrees at 4:00, this is the only time I see a big difference between the upstairs and downstairs temps. When this happens, the upstairs temps can climb to 76 degrees. If it's raining outside, I've seen the indoor humidity reach 48%.
Based on what I've read online, comfortable indoor humidity should be around 40% during the winter. With numbers as low as 16% in my daughter's room, we have been using a cool mist humidifier to keep the levels around 35% at night.
What is really confusing me are the numbers I'm seeing tonight:
Daughter's room w/o humidifier
Temp: 68 degrees
Humidity: 16%
Daughter's room after humidifier turned on
Temp: 68 degrees
Humidity: 35%
Outside data with Acurite indoor thermometer
Temp: 27 degrees
Humidity: 16%
WeatherBug App
Temp: 19 degrees
Humidity: 86%
Dew point: 15 degrees
Weather.gov
Temp: 23 degrees
Humidity: 68%
Dew point: 14 degrees
I don't understand why there are such differences in the humidity readings. Based on the data I've collected, do you guys think I need to install a humidifier? If so, what type would you recommend and why? I really want to get this right, especially because I don't want anything to happen to my daughter.
Thanks.