Johnny Rock
Footballguy
To me something's wrong when you need to turn off your air exchanger completely.
I hear you. As I said, Chief's guy says that the system is bringing in the outside air, running it through the filter (good) and across the coils (bad) then venting it through the house. With the house being so air tight, he said the coils are never dry, they are always wet. Therefore, the air is picking up the moisture from the coils and bringing it in the house. Right now, it could be that it is just running to much in fresh air mode because the weather is mild and the AC hardly comes on. If the ventialtion system is trying to bring in air 30 or 40 minutes every hour because of the way it is set, it is just pumping moisture in, and there's not enough AC to dry it out. So, I switched it off until the guy comes out and dials it way back. Then I may try it again and see what happens.To me something's wrong when you need to turn off your air exchanger completely.
Why is that? His point was, when you are home, doors are getting opened and closed, windows, etc. Air is getting in just naturally by your actions. When you leave on vacation, you usually turn the AC up, and it isn't going to run much. So you turn the whole house ventilation system on so it will run occasionally and keep your air a little fresher.The last thing I would do us run the system unattended. I'm almost speechless at how criminally dumb that suggestion is.
I'd get yet another opinion.
Air tight houses are the reason we need air exchangers. But they have you turning yours off. If the air coming in through the windows brought the humidity down then the air exchanger should do the same.Just talked to my neighbor and wow, I don't feel so bad now. His indoor humidity has been running from the 60%s in to the 70%s! I opened my windows again today and got it down to 36% or so. Was loving it. Closed the windows and went to the grocery store. Still sitting under 40%. So making process. But apparently this builder builds really air tight houses!
Pretty much.As I said earlier, I don't know that you would call this an air exchanger. It's just a ventilation setup. It simply opens a valve to ductwork that pulls air straight in from outside and kicks on the blower fan. The fan pulls the air in, draws it through the filter, then across the coils and in to the house. Every AC person I have talked to has said that the air running across the coils is the issue. The coils are wet. They never dry out. Systems don't work that way. So the process of the air coming acros the coils picks up the moisture from them and brings it in to the house. Hence, rising humidity. Air coming in through the window obviously doesn't run across any wet coils, therefore it comes in dryer.
Edit to add, I'm not saying there is nothing else at play here. There may be. But the ventialtion system bringing moisture in makes perfect sense now that I have seen the system and how it functions. I don't see how it COULDN'T be bringing moisture in.
Your guy mentioned the ERV system as an alternative, but didn't feel it would be worth the expense. He was one that basically said "I'd just turn it off." By "your guy", I mean the tech from that company. I didn't actually get the owner of course. I also forgot to give them my Angie's List coupon. Blew $35.Pretty much.If a fresh air system is set up properly, it's attached to an ERV unit that will treat the air BEFORE it enters your ductwork. It sounds like yours doesn't have the ERV system, so the advice you're getting makes perfect sense to me.As I said earlier, I don't know that you would call this an air exchanger. It's just a ventilation setup. It simply opens a valve to ductwork that pulls air straight in from outside and kicks on the blower fan. The fan pulls the air in, draws it through the filter, then across the coils and in to the house. Every AC person I have talked to has said that the air running across the coils is the issue. The coils are wet. They never dry out. Systems don't work that way. So the process of the air coming acros the coils picks up the moisture from them and brings it in to the house. Hence, rising humidity. Air coming in through the window obviously doesn't run across any wet coils, therefore it comes in dryer.
Edit to add, I'm not saying there is nothing else at play here. There may be. But the ventialtion system bringing moisture in makes perfect sense now that I have seen the system and how it functions. I don't see how it COULDN'T be bringing moisture in.
I've pretty much decided against the whole-house dehumidifier. The AC guy Chief put me in touch with said most people use those to get the humidity down to about 48%. Mine is pretty much there now just turning the fresh air ventilation off. Plus, my wife has pretty much refused to have a dehumidifier downstairs, which is where I think we need it. So I think I'll likely be living with what I got for now.If your house is humid go get a cheap dehumidifier at Walmart. They'll do about 1000sqft. Plug er in and let it go. When this works you can decide if you want to spend money on a unit that you attach to your furnace.
5k could solve a few of mine. You offering?Have you considered whether $5k could solve your problem?
This post is hidden because you have chosen to ignore posts by Otis. View it anyway?El Floppo said:5k could solve a few of mine. You offering?Have you considered whether $5k could solve your problem?