If water condenses on your windows in winter, the problem might not be the windows – it might be that the house is too humid.
Humidity makes your home more comfortable in winter, but you can have too much of a good thing. When you see condensation on your windows in wintertime, it’s a sign that you should lower the humidity level in your house. Otherwise, the water that condenses on your windows – not to mention inside your walls – can cause damage over time.
Try these suggestions for reducing humidity levels.
- Reduce moisture sources within your house:
- Don’t store firewood in the home.
- Repair foundation leaks.
- Turn your humidifier down or off.
- Cover any exposed earth floor in a basement or crawl space, as well as sump pits.
- Don’t hang laundry to dry inside your home.
- Limit the use of vaporizers or steam generators.
- Ventilate your home:
- Vent your dryer to the outside.
- Use exhaust fans when showering or cooking.
- Install a heat recovery ventilator (HRV) to exhaust warm moist air from your house and replace it with dry, fresh air from outdoors.
- Adjust the humidifier on your furnace, based on the outdoor temperature:
- -20 degrees F. — 15%
- -20 to -10 degrees F. — 20%
- -10 to 0 degrees F. — 25%
- 0 to +10 degrees F. — 35%
- +10 and above degrees F. — 40%
NEWS
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