RalphVa
Super Member
- Joined
- Dec 19, 2003
- Messages
- 7,885
- Location
- Charlottesville, VA, USA
- Tractor
- JD 2025R, previously Gravely 5650 & JD 4010 & JD 1025R
In our 7th year after encapsulating our crawl space underneath the family room and laundry room, we started experiencing odor and it affecting my wife this year. It has been traced to bacteria formation underneath the encapsulation. The expert who diagnosed this recommended a commercial dehumidifier, Santa Fe or AprilAire. We went with the Santa Fe because it is more efficient even though about $100 more. Bought their 70 pints/day one.
There's a remarkable difference between it and the run-of-the-mill department store dehumidifier. We tried one of those in our first year of encapsulation. It was inadequate (at the same 70 pts/day) because it grossly heated up the crawl space and didn't seem to lower the humidity much. We went to about 3 different fans located at various places in the crawl space plus a normal dehumidifer in the adjacent utility room. This worked well for 6 years, until this year.
The exhaust from the Santa Fe is only about maybe 70 F. I figure the thing has enough air flow such that the cold coil probably only cools the air maybe 5 F and then the hot coil reheats the air 15 F: 60 F down to 55 F and then back up 70 F. I could do a whole lot of calcs to prove this, as this is kind of work that I did as a chemical engineer, but figure I'm pretty close in my guess.
Highly recommend the Santa Fe. The compressor is so quiet that you cannot tell when it comes on. You just have to watch for the water being condensed out on the cold coil.
Ralph
There's a remarkable difference between it and the run-of-the-mill department store dehumidifier. We tried one of those in our first year of encapsulation. It was inadequate (at the same 70 pts/day) because it grossly heated up the crawl space and didn't seem to lower the humidity much. We went to about 3 different fans located at various places in the crawl space plus a normal dehumidifer in the adjacent utility room. This worked well for 6 years, until this year.
The exhaust from the Santa Fe is only about maybe 70 F. I figure the thing has enough air flow such that the cold coil probably only cools the air maybe 5 F and then the hot coil reheats the air 15 F: 60 F down to 55 F and then back up 70 F. I could do a whole lot of calcs to prove this, as this is kind of work that I did as a chemical engineer, but figure I'm pretty close in my guess.
Highly recommend the Santa Fe. The compressor is so quiet that you cannot tell when it comes on. You just have to watch for the water being condensed out on the cold coil.
Ralph