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    Humidity issue i can't correct!!!

    Hello farmers,

    So, I'm growing 4 plants in a 4x4x7 tent in a 10x12x10 sealed room. They are day 12 seedlings. I live a couple hundred feet from the beach, so humidity is HIGH! It stands at around 70% during the day, and 80-85% at night. Temperature stays between 75-85 degrees in tent. I'm using DWC, and all 4 seedlings are currently in 1 reservoir (5 gallons of water). I have an iPower 6" inline exhaust (442 CFM) and passive intake (Five 6" ducts with insect screens). Running 600W MH at 75% power several feet above seedlings. There is negative air pressure. 2 oscillating fans above and below canopy

    The problem I'm having is I can't seem to get the humidity lower than 70% RH (sometimes rises to 80% RH)!

    In this stage, I'm not so worried, but I know this will be a problem come flower.

    What I've done:
    1) installed window A/C--- ran on "dry" setting but still didn't bring humidity down in tent.
    2) tried 50-pint dehumidifier---brought humidity in room down to 45%, but TENT stays at around 70% RH in tent.
    3) installed fan in room to circulate
    4) tried putting dehumidifier in tent---no help
    5) tried leaving door to tent wide open during light period with dehumidifier running in room---no change
    6) tried exhausting into room instead of outside room---no change
    7) took glass out of air-cooled hood---no change

    This really is getting quite expensive, and if possible, I'd like to avoid any other big purchases (considered intake fan).

    PLEASE HELP! I've been searching for a week and no forums or websites have been able to answer my question. It's usually, "get a dehumidifier." Even this website says it. Maybe DWC isn't the best choice for coastal regions? All I can think is that the 5 gallons of water in the tent is keeping my RH high, despite air pump and air stones.

    Any GOOD advice!? Nebula!? Sirius!? I'm modeling my grow after Sirius' 600W grow journal. PLEEEEEASE HELP!

    Thanks,
    Kalidaze

    #2
    Can I see a picture of your hygrometer, in place, don't move it.
    SSD

    Comment


    • Kalidaze
      Kalidaze commented
      Editing a comment
      In about 2 hours when the lights come on I'll post a pic.

    #3
    My background is construction/engineering more than grow skills but here is my 2 cents.

    It may be that your ambient humidity is so high since you live by a beach that even the best measures seem to do little.
    Sometimes there is no way to force an environment to work because nature eventually trumps all.

    Ventilating to outside is like opening a window on a submarine, there is no way to push enough humidity out because the surrounding area is saturated.
    Dehumidifiers create more heat which makes more problems and it will make your hydro into more humidity.

    You might need to switch to coco, even then you will fight humidity.

    Comment


    • Kalidaze
      Kalidaze commented
      Editing a comment
      Thanks for your comment Weedgrodamus. To clarify, are you suggesting I vent inside? I have tried that. Slightly raised temps, and despite 45% RH in room, didn't help inside the tent.

    • PRIMO
      PRIMO commented
      Editing a comment
      I'm not an engineer, but it seems to me that if room rh is 45 with dehumidifer and you vent tent into room with 420 fpm that should change the air 4x a min. I would try closing 4 of the five 6 in. inlets and put a 6 in. fan into the the last one pointing into the tent to help move 45 rh in and 75rh out. And if the temp gets to high turn on the a/c on cool setting.Also if you put the dehumidifier in the tent and it did'nt bring the rh down you need a new one.

    • DrPhoton
      DrPhoton commented
      Editing a comment
      Yes this is a good suggestion.

    #4
    I have beach humidity too. One reason I do coco
    hang in there
    Indoor- Coco coir & Perlite - 5 gal Smart pots
    Veg-T5s Flower- Platinum LEDS
    GH Flora Trio Cali-mag, Terpinator Liquid Bloom
    photoperiod feminized seeds
    http://www.growweedeasy.com/sites/gr...ow-journal.pdf
    http://www.growweedeasy.com/sites/gr...o-May-2017.pdf
    http://www.growweedeasy.com/sites/gr...ow-Journal.pdf

    Testing for the_honeysticks genetics

    Comment


      #5
      With your environment, you may be better off growing autos. I realize that doesn't help for this grow. But they go from seed to harvest is less time (up to month or more less time). You can leave your lights on up to 24/0 if you want to. Can leave tent flaps open continuously for better air flow. Seems like a hydro grow isn't the best choice. !2 day old seedlings.....seems you could change to another grow medium if you choose to.

      Comment


      • Kalidaze
        Kalidaze commented
        Editing a comment
        Thanks insomniaczzz. I will definitely consider autos for my next grow, and look into transplanting to a different medium.

      #6
      maybe since still seedlings, you could change to a coco grow, per Tika.

      Comment


        #7
        RH here in the desert is27% today

        Comment


        • Kalidaze
          Kalidaze commented
          Editing a comment
          Thanks for the random comment. ​​​​​​​:-P

        #8
        You are welcome! hope I helped.

        Comment


          #9
          Hi Kalidaze

          Right now in the grow you don't have to worry about the humidity when you are vegging. I'm in a basement that was 70 plus humidity and I couldn't bring it down with my dehumidifier running 24/7 I had it in the tent . Just have a good exhaust fan and run it 24/7 4 plants in that tent, I can't see the plants but if they are bushy they make humidity. I run a oscillating fan on the roof pointing across the top and one in a corner blowing up the wall just for better circulation and no mold from high humidity
          Bubblehead
          4x4 Gorilla Tent 600 watt hps and Veg Tent T5 Fluorescence
          4 Cures and a Life time gardener
          http://forum.growweedeasy.com/forum/...ze-these-leafs
          http://forum.growweedeasy.com/forum/...female-56-days

          Comment


          • Kalidaze
            Kalidaze commented
            Editing a comment
            Hi Karlee. Thanks for your input. You are correct, my conditions are ideal for vegging. I'm trying to look forward for when they do flower and humidity should be lower. I've played with it just to see if I could lower RH but no success. Plants are not bushy yet, just started on 2nd set of serrated leaves. I worry about mold in the flowering stage with a RH of 70-80%. Similarly, I have 2 small oscillating fans, one blowing beneath the plant, one above. I run the exhaust fan 24/7. I'm trying to figure out how to lower the humidity now, so that when flowering time comes, RH isn't a big issue.

          • Karlee
            Karlee commented
            Editing a comment
            I didn't get mold but when you start drying keep the air circulating. Only now that winter is here I'm in the ideal for buds but I was okay at 69-70 % humidity

          #10
          Invest in co2...no issue....
          keep air moving...

          Comment


          • Kalidaze
            Kalidaze commented
            Editing a comment
            Hello Green75, are you suggesting my fan outside the grow tent, the exhaust fan inside, and the 2 oscillating fans inside are not adequate to keep the air moving?

          • Green75
            Green75 commented
            Editing a comment
            Plenty I believe..if you add co2 it Will bring all those elements together and work for you well

          #11
          If you learn about the characteristics of relative humidity it might help you understand what you could do. Relative humidity is the ratio of how much water is held in the air compared to how much can be held at that specific temperature. The amount of water than can be held is increased with higher temperatures.
          For example, air at 60ºF (~16ºC) can hold over five times as much water as the same air at 20ºF (~ –7ºC)
          So for different temperatures with the same RH you have a different total amount of suspended water.

          Venting out humid air is thought to lower humidity, but it can only lower it with respect to outside air, as air has to be pulled from somewhere new. So unless your pulling in air from a less humid micro enviroment, the result will be no better than outside air (excluding the temperature and pressure aspect of course). Usually venting is most beneficial where a source of humidity is created internally. Such as bathrooms, greenhouses, living occupents etc.
          Greenhouse climate control displays the best efforts at enviroment conditioning. Its basically HVAC used in homes.
          Heating venting and air conditioning is used to control nearly all aspects of enviroment control.
          Heating increases temperature but is also used to control humidity by warming the air and reducing RH. Venting is used to control heat by venting out warm air and pulling in cooler outside air (remember nothing can be removed without being replaced). Venting is also used to reduce humidity. Air conditioning is used to cool air but also has an effect on lowering humidity (through condensing not from lowering temperature).

          With your situation you may want to try one of these things or a combination of all. The higher RH in your grow box compared to the outside room even with dehimid devices could be because of temperature differences or perhaps transpiration from the plants.
          Last edited by DrPhoton; 12-11-2016, 08:29 PM.
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          Comment


          • Kalidaze
            Kalidaze commented
            Editing a comment
            Hello Danofdanger. Thanks for your comment. Ummmm, well.......I'm wondering if you read my thread. I have tried all of these things. I installed a window A/C......didn't lower humidity in the tent, though helped control temperature (which isn't an issue anyway). I used a dehumidifier to lower the RH in the room my tent is in (sealed room) to 45% RH......tent RH STAYED at 70% RH after several hours. Air that was being pulled into tent was 45% RH, so, I was pulling in air from a less humid environment. If you wouldn't mind, could you take another look at my thread and maybe suggest something I haven't already tried.

            Also, I'm a little confused where you wrote ,"The amount of water than can be held is increased with higher temperatures." Later, you wrote, "Heating increases temperature but is also used to control humidity by warming the air and reducing RH." So, higher temps can increase the water in the air, thus higher RH, yet higher heat (thus higher temp) can REDUCE humidity? Can you help me better understand this? It seems contradictory.
            Last edited by Kalidaze; 12-11-2016, 08:53 PM.

          #12
          Originally posted by South Sierra Dude View Post
          Can I see a picture of your hygrometer, in place, don't move it.
          Hi South Sierra Dude. Here's the placement of my thermo-hydrometer. Back corner, off the ground, not directly under the lights. Not raining today to RH is "slightly" lower than normal (barely).
          Attached Files

          Comment


            #13
            Nice. Seems Dr Green has the real solution as per usual.
            SSD

            Comment


            • Kalidaze
              Kalidaze commented
              Editing a comment
              Do you see any issue with the placement of my hydrometer?

            • South Sierra Dude
              South Sierra Dude commented
              Editing a comment
              I see good things only. Nice set up.
              Last edited by South Sierra Dude; 12-11-2016, 09:00 PM.

            #14
            I have nothing else construction to add, but I do hope things work out for and you can get a nice harvest avoiding bud rot. Sending good growing vibes your way.

            Comment


            • Kalidaze
              Kalidaze commented
              Editing a comment
              Same back to you. Thank you much.

            #15
            I suggest you Lower your light...those girls are lanky...they stretch like that to get closer to the light...what's your ph..I see yellow leaves

            Comment


            • Kalidaze
              Kalidaze commented
              Editing a comment
              Hello again Green75. I was wondering about that. I lowered my light and turned them up to 75% power (from 50%) once they fell over (from overstretching). They don't seem to be stretching anymore. Ph is around 6.0. I'm curious about the yellow new leaves as well. I've been asking around and searching but haven't gotten a definitive answer on that either. I plan on adding nutes soon.

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