Chewwy
Platinum Member
- Joined
- May 5, 2015
- Messages
- 768
- Location
- Upstate SC, Near the Electric City
- Tractor
- Kubota L3240, MF 265, MF383
You are right but for a bit more complex reason. To remove any significant heat from the house with the flow through the HVAC system, you have to cool it below the dew point. It takes a lot more heat removal to condense the water vapor than it does to cool the air, so your AC gets a lot more bang for the buck if it's cooling low humidity air. The dehumidifier cycle is optimized for condensing water instead of cooling air, so it's better overall.
People don't realize how much heat is contained in the vaporization of water. That's why "swamp coolers" that only vaporize water are so effective for AC in very dry climates.
While it may improve the cooling capabilty of the ac unit, operation of the dehumidifier adds heat to the conditioned space that then has to be removed by the ac. The dehumidifier cools the air to condense the water vapor but then returns that heat energy plus the energy consumed by operating the dehumidifier back to the conditioned space.