justmehere said:
Hi I am living in a 2 bedroom house with base bord heaters but i have also purchesed 3 oil space heaters, my landlord since has givin me a bogus eviction notice because of to much humididiy in the air, his fault really for nothin ensuring propor ventalation when repairing the house
but my question is that if space heaters, brand new ones at that when heating cooler air like in the moring or later at night with air cirulation (ceilling fans) causes dry air, more humididy or just a neutural mix.
any coments would be greatly appretiated,
thanks.
Bottom line first: too much humidity is extremely difficult to achieve in winter and is most certainly not possible without actually injecting moisture into the air.
Several important points:
1. It is a fundamental principle of mixing of gases that all gases in a mixture act independently of each other. That means that the
absolute amount of moisture inside and outside the house will try very hard to equalize. Unless a house is extremely airtight and/or has a constant supply of humidification, moisture inside will rapidly force its way out out of the house due to the unequal vapor pressure.
2. Changing the inside temperature will change the
relative humidity, but it will not change the
absolute humidity. For most climates, a good rule of thumb is that the absolute humidity is roughly equal to the daily minimum outside temperature. That's because the Earth radiates heat at night until the air temperature reaches the dew point. To figure out what this means, have a look at a psychrometric chart:
http://www.truetex.com/psychrometric_chart.htm Sensible (regular) air temperature is along the bottom, dew point is on the y-axis (shown on the left), and relative humidity in the curves. Notice, if the dew point (absolute humidity) outside is 35 F, you can trace sideways until you get to your inside temperature - say, 70F - and find that the house will tend to seek a relative humidity of 25%. It is pretty difficult to consistently maintain a delta of more than 10% between this and the actual humidity inside. In other words, without active humidification, you won't typically see more than 35% relative humidity if it is 30F outside.
3. What can you do about this? Get a decent temperature/humidity sensor. Oregon Scientific makes the best consumer ones I've seen and you can get them at lots of retail stores (or onliine) starting at about $15. Record what it says on a daily basis. Also, look for (and demand from your landlord)
actual evidence of humidity problems. A claim without evidence is an invalid claim.
4. Caveat: there are some unusual situations where condensation can occur, and I'd need to know more about what the landlord is claiming to know if they apply. These would include tight construction but with single-pane windows, windows in bathrooms (ie, shower-caused condensation), tight, but poorly insulated walls or floors (that is a real killer for a house, but couldn't be your fault). FYI, basements in a climate with a real winter are never overly humid in the winter.
If your landlord wants out out and is willing to invent a reason, you may not really want to stay, but then again, if you do, you'll probably need the help of a lawyer. The science here is pretty straightforward, though, and the fact that he's doing this in winter works to your advantage, not his.