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HvacTech2
 
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Hi Jack, hope you are having a nice day

On 19-Jun-05 At About 23:28:32, Jack wrote to All
Subject: Humidifier Placement vs. electrical outlet---

J From: "Jack"

J My basement has very few outlets... and all are tucked away.

J I want to place a demidifier, should I put it in the best place for
J air circulation, and use an appliance-heavy duty extension cord-- or
J am I better off placing near outlet, giving up a bit of
J circulation.. so I don't have to do use extension cord, which I worry
J about with such a high draw unit.

Humidity travels evenly throughout so it really doesn't matter where it is in
the basement as long as it is an open area.


-= HvacTech2 =-


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Jack
 
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Default Humidifier Placement vs. electrical outlet---

My basement has very few outlets... and all are tucked away.

I want to place a demidifier, should I put it in the best place for air
circulation, and use an appliance-heavy duty extension cord-- or am I
better off placing near outlet, giving up a bit of circulation.. so I
don't have to do use extension cord, which I worry about with such a
high draw unit.

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Goedjn
 
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I want to place a demidifier, should I put it in the best place for air
circulation, and use an appliance-heavy duty extension cord-- or am I
better off placing near outlet, giving up a bit of circulation.. so I
don't have to do use extension cord, which I worry about with such a
high draw unit.



Either way will work fine. If you really do use a heavy-duty
extension cord, and protect it from damage, it will be fine. On the
other hand, even if you stick the dehumidifier in the corner,
it will do pretty much the same thing. You're NOT going to end
up with one dry corner and a wet rest-of-basement..

--Goedjn

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Greetings Jack,

Any cheap extension cord rated for the number of watts of your
dehumidifier (continuous) will do so long as you don't damage the cord.
However, installing a new outlet might be on par with the cost of a
heavy duty extension cord and it is a job you can tackle yourself in
1/2 hour after you have the parts together so you might consider it.

Materials List
============================
$0.50 15A duplex recepticle (use wirethrough from GFCI already in
basement)
$1.75 Metal device box to put it in
$1.50 Faceplate
$0.20 Plastic cable clamp
$0.10 Grounding Screw
$0.13/ft 12-2 Wire from existing GFCI
$0.40 2ft EMT
$0.60 EMT -- Romex cable clamp
$0.30 Single EMT Conduit Offset Clamp
$0.40 Anchors and screws (x2)
=================
$5.75 Total + /ft

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m Ransley
 
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I had mine in a corner behind the furnace and it cycled to often. I
moved it to a more cenrtral area it works more evenly now



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SQLit
 
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"Jack" wrote in message
oups.com...
My basement has very few outlets... and all are tucked away.

I want to place a demidifier, should I put it in the best place for air
circulation, and use an appliance-heavy duty extension cord-- or am I
better off placing near outlet, giving up a bit of circulation.. so I
don't have to do use extension cord, which I worry about with such a
high draw unit.


The real trick is not where the outlet is located it is where the DRAIN is
located.
Depending on the humidity you could be empting the unit 2-3 times a day. My
parents had one they cut a hole in the tank and screwed a garden hose to it.
The garden hose was about 5 feet long and emptied into the floor drain.

Dehumidifiers are compressors, I would not use one on an extension cord.



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Stormin Mormon
 
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Perhaps put the unit near the outlet. And place a fan on the floor to
circulate air.

I remember reading that the best place for a dehum is about three feet from
the ceiling. Cause that's where the moisture is. I don't know if this is
true.

--

Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
www.mormons.com


"Jack" wrote in message
oups.com...
My basement has very few outlets... and all are tucked away.

I want to place a demidifier, should I put it in the best place for air
circulation, and use an appliance-heavy duty extension cord-- or am I
better off placing near outlet, giving up a bit of circulation.. so I
don't have to do use extension cord, which I worry about with such a
high draw unit.


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Jack
 
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Actually, that has got me thinking... I am going to mount it from the
ceiling joists, right above the wash sink. It is right by the
outlet... and will free up tight floorspace.

The dehumidifier (65/hour, $180 at Walmart) It is kind of heavy, but
nothing a little over-engineering and a bunch of 2by6's & lag bolts
can't handle.

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Stretch
 
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I have six data loggers that measure and record both humidity and
temperature. I often use several in the same room, house or
crawlspace. While it is true that if you dry one part of a room, it
will dry other parts, it will NOT be even if the air flow is
restricted. Having measured and recorded such situations many times, I
feel that the air circulation is most important. Also if you mount it
near the ceiling, make sure it is not a top discharge type. Anything
that increases air recirculation from the dehumidifier discharge back
to the dehumidifier inlet will reduce capacity and efficiency.
Remember, it is an AIR dehumidifier, not a WOOD dehumidifier. "AIR
conditioning begins with AIR."

Stretch

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Jack
 
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Thanks, It is a top discharge unit, after setting it up (on the floor)
I noticed that. I was just wondering if mounting it high would be a
problem, you answered the question before I asked it. I will put it
on floor. It has a digital humidistat... what is the best setting for
a basement in summer?



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Stretch
 
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Jack,

50% to 60% should eliminate any chance for mold to grow. Monitor the
humidity away from the dehumidifier though. The digital dehumidistat
will measure the humidity at the dehumidifier, and I have found the
built in ones are not always accurate.

Check these links also.




Crawlspace problems
http://www.contractingbusiness.com/C...S=&NI L=false

We're in the mold business, like it or not
http://www.contractingbusiness.com/C...S=&NI L=false

Humidity Control
http://www.contractingbusiness.com/C...S=&NI L=false


Stretch

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