Philster
Captain
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2009
- Messages
- 3,344
Re: Does Heating Air reduce moisture content? (For HVAC Folks...and other smart peop
Part of the confusion comes from the fact that in winter, the air all around the area of a cold weather town is cold/dry. It's the nature of the beast.
So, if you heat cold/dry air and don't add moisture to it -- moisture that hotter air can handle -- then it's hot/dry air. I mean, it's winter, so the air you are starting out with is dry. Sure, warmer air holds more moisture, but where's it coming from unless you humidify it?
In summer, we are starting out surrounded by hot/warm air, which starts out with more moisture, 'cause hey, it's the nature of the beast. The good thing is that just cooling it gets it to drop its moisture... so cooling also dries the air, provided the cooling system runs long enough and isn't oversized.
Part of the confusion comes from the fact that in winter, the air all around the area of a cold weather town is cold/dry. It's the nature of the beast.
So, if you heat cold/dry air and don't add moisture to it -- moisture that hotter air can handle -- then it's hot/dry air. I mean, it's winter, so the air you are starting out with is dry. Sure, warmer air holds more moisture, but where's it coming from unless you humidify it?
In summer, we are starting out surrounded by hot/warm air, which starts out with more moisture, 'cause hey, it's the nature of the beast. The good thing is that just cooling it gets it to drop its moisture... so cooling also dries the air, provided the cooling system runs long enough and isn't oversized.