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Using air conditioning and humidifiers together


poppysdad

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Seems a contradiction to use both together judging by the amount of water our air conditioner places outside every morning but I wake up a couple of times a night for a toilet visit with a dry throat and lips. My wife suffers even more so than I do. Before anyone suggests the obvious air conditioning does greatly improve my breathing issues. 

So, anyone have experiences of using both together and was it successful plus any advice on models and make etc. 

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In theory, there is no reason why you shouldn't run both, keep the humidifier away from the inlet duct of the aircon.

 

Also, running you air con fan as fast as you can help.  The air will be delivered faster and warmer and dehumidified less.  If you want the science behind this, let me know.

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1 hour ago, JBChiangRai said:

In theory, there is no reason why you shouldn't run both, keep the humidifier away from the inlet duct of the aircon.

 

Also, running you air con fan as fast as you can help.  The air will be delivered faster and warmer and dehumidified less.  If you want the science behind this, let me know.

 If you want the science behind this, let me know - would be great. 

Thank you 

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54 minutes ago, ravip said:

 If you want the science behind this, let me know - would be great. 

Thank you 

 

Warm air can contain more moisture than cool air, if you cool warm moist air the dew point lowers and water can condense out, you see this dripping out the drain pipe of you air con's waste.

 

If your fan is running slowly and the air con is currently cooling at (say) 12,000 BTU the air coming out the air con will be colder than if the fan is running at a high speed while cooling at the same rate of (say) 12,000 BTU.

 

Running at a high fan speed cools the room slightly more as if it were running slow, but the air coming out is warmer and because it's warmer the dew point is higher and less water is condensed out.

 

The reason running the fan faster cools the room slightly more is that condensing water out of the air uses some of your cooling capability, the less you condense water the more cooling capacity is used to cool the air.

 

 

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Currently johng its set at 27° on a cool automatic setting with ion cleaning set to on. Works very efficiently but this constant and sometimes very dry throat and lips is becoming a nuisance, I always have a bottle of water bedside and take a few mouthfuls each time i wake but my wife more so since she recovered from COVID now many months ago really suffers a lot worse than I do. 

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Ion cleaning ?   perhaps it's ozone causing or exacerbating the dry throat...?   might be useful to buy a hydrometer (cheap )  to gauge how humid the air is,   below 40%  humidity most people start to suffer the symptoms you describe 50-60%  humidity would be more comfortable on throat but still feeling cool on the skin.

 

As suggested above check that the auto mode doesn't include a bit of "drying" too.

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You wake up several times a night, your mouth is dry.

Maybe you have sleep apneu? 

Once it started with me , waking up in the morning with a very dry throat/mouth.

Didnt feel like me, so to doctor, hospital and diagnosed sleep apneu, over 40 stops in a night.

Sleeping in the night, had no problems, didnt wake up, but in the morning, no fun. First thing was water.

But probably depending on your condition.

The higher the setting of temperature of airco, the more moist.

You put humidifier in room, first more moist , but airco will take it out again.

You could also put a tile of water in the room, as the water will evaporate, depending on temp setting airco.

That will cost you no extra energy. Maybe worth a try. Draw a line on the level of water and you can see in teh morning how much water was evaporated during the night.

 

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