AE-NMidlands wrote: ↑Wed Oct 12, 2022 6:39 pm
I thought low indoor RH was just a fact of life in winter (in a leaky or MVHR house) as outdoor air is cold with a very low
actual moisture content, so the RH drops off dramatically when you increase the air temperature.
Not sure I would want to humidify indoors unless it was just by house plants transpiring...
A
Our last house (early 1990's brick and block) used to sit with the RH at between 45% and 65%, don't think I ever saw it drop below 45% in all the years we lived there. This house (with MVHR) regularly drops down to 30% to 35%, especially in winter. 30% is too low for our comfort, definitely starts to cause some irritation to my nose and throat. I believe that the core reason for this is just the effectiveness of the ventilation, in moving air outside that would otherwise contain moisture from breathing, cooking, showers etc very much more quickly than our old house.
We don't run our MVHR as "hard" as we're supposed to (according to building regs), but have it set to change the air in the house completely about once every two and a half hours. I've tweaked this a fair bit, through trial and error, primarily because the RH in winter was just too low with it set to the building regs ventilation rate. Others I know with MVHR have done the same, the general consensus seems to be that building regs require ventilation rates if MVHR is fitted that are significantly higher than optimum for either heat recovery or humidity control.
Although good ventilation is generally a good thing, too much ventilation, even with MVHR, can result in the air being too dry, IMHO. All I've read suggests that if the RH drops below about 40% then some people may find that uncomfortable. I believe that current guidance is that RH should be between 40% and 60% to be comfortable. Right now the air in our house is at 41%, and we've not yet had any heating on this year, neither has it been particularly cold. I expect the RH to drop below 40% over the next few weeks, as the weather cools, and it will probably be down around 30% by late December/January.
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