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Post Date | Sold By | Sale Price | Activity |
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05/31/23 | Best Buy | $169.99 |
0 |
04/09/22 | Best Buy | $159.99 |
2 |
09/15/21 | Best Buy | $150 |
4 |
09/07/21 | Best Buy | $159.99 |
17 |
08/20/21 | Best Buy | $169 |
1 |
07/21/21 | eBay | $160 frontpage |
104 |
04/14/21 | Best Buy | $149.99 |
0 |
03/27/21 | Best Buy | $149.99 |
6 |
02/16/21 | Best Buy | $149.99 popular |
38 |
12/19/20 | Best Buy | $149.99 |
3 |
Sold By | Sale Price |
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Best Buy | $239.99 |
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Assume I've done everything else humanly possible to solve the problem. Thanks
It will certainly help, but as someone else mentioned, it's possible that it will run non-stop. I would suggest determining the root cause of the excessive moisture in your garage, particularly if the relative humidity level in your garage is - on average - higher than the relative humidity outside. If your garage is typically the same humidity level as outside, I wouldn't read much further below.
Concrete can absorb and release very high amounts of moisture, to determine how much is coming from your floor, you can seal tape down a square of clear poly plastic (seal/tape all four sides) on the floor (slab) let sit for overnight or so, then visually inspect how much moisture has accumulated between the plastic and the slab.
If there is a high amount of water droplets built up, you may first start by making sure that you have positive drainage away from the building, and that your gutters are properly collecting roof runoff (not leaking) and diverting that runoff as far away from the building as possible via downspouts.
Keep in mind, if your garage doesn't have an interior ceiling (exposed open roof purlins) and is vented via soffit/gable vents, a dehumidifier will not achieve much.
I personally wouldn't recommend a dehumidifier for this application. These are really not designed to remove that much moisture over that short amount of time. While it will certainly help remove moisture from the air, I feel it would be not the most cost effective solution.
These are really designed to run and make small adjustments to an entire rooms RH level, not quick abrupt adjustments. They are intended to turn on/off (similar to a thermostat) multiple times a day to maintain a desired RH level. For example, turning on to drop the RH from 57% to 55%.
Bathroom fans don't do any active conditioning or drying of air, they simply (attempt to) create a slightly lower pressure in the bathroom, which draws fresh (drier) air in through leaks, primarily space under your bathroom door. This subsequently exhausts the warm humid air outside and replaces it with air from the rest of your home. This way that warm humid air doesn't condense when it hits your "cold" mirror!
Hope that helps.
What if fire when not home? Same as if fire anywhere else and not home. This time, smart house, so I am aware of everything going on around it.
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Concrete can absorb and release very high amounts of moisture, to determine how much is coming from your floor, you can seal tape down a square of clear poly plastic (seal/tape all four sides) on the floor (slab) let sit for overnight or so, then visually inspect how much moisture has accumulated between the plastic and the slab.
If there is a high amount of water droplets built up, you may first start by making sure that you have positive drainage away from the building, and that your gutters are properly collecting roof runoff (not leaking) and diverting that runoff as far away from the building as possible via downspouts.
Keep in mind, if your garage doesn't have an interior ceiling (exposed open roof purlins) and is vented via soffit/gable vents, a dehumidifier will not achieve much.