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Midea Cube 20-Pint Smart Dehumidifier (up to 1,500 Sq Ft) on sale for
$149.99 when you click "
$10 Extra Savings" coupon box on product page.
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About this Product:
- Up to 3X larger water tank allows the Midea Cube to operate up to 3X longer than a conventional dehumidifier.
- 1,500 Square Feet of Coverage- This dehumidifier is able to collect 20 pint of water a day and adjust humidity from 35% to 85%
- You can remove the water tank and place the unit above the sink using the included drain hose, or position it over a floor drain, near a window or door.
- Control with Smartphone or Voice Assistant
- Midea Cube Air App enables monitoring the real-time dehumidification status of Midea Cube whenever and wherever
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If you have a particularly inefficiently designed dehumidifier, it may raise the temperature more than an efficiently designed unit - but this unit is energy star qualified in 2021, which means it's one of the most efficient dehumidifiers out there. Compared to most older dehumidifiers, this one will heat the room less.
Dehumidifiers are not ACs (though they share the same technology of compressing and decompressing a refrigerant like r134a). What those reviewers wanted was clearly an AC that moves the generated heat to the outside either by splitting it (mini split, split at the window) or blowing hot air out of a vent or window. ACs don't just cool, they also remove dehumidify, albeit less than a dehumidifier.
A dehumidifier is better at dehumidifying mostly because of the heating that occurs after air blows over the cold coil. By raising the temperature, you raise the air's capacity to take up moisture, which lowers the relative humidity.
So this unit is great for your basement to make sure you don't get mold or rusty tools, but it's not made to make living in a swamp at 110F tolerable - only an AC does that.
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If you have a particularly inefficiently designed dehumidifier, it may raise the temperature more than an efficiently designed unit - but this unit is energy star qualified in 2021, which means it's one of the most efficient dehumidifiers out there. Compared to most older dehumidifiers, this one will heat the room less.
Dehumidifiers are not ACs (though they share the same technology of compressing and decompressing a refrigerant like r134a). What those reviewers wanted was clearly an AC that moves the generated heat to the outside either by splitting it (mini split, split at the window) or blowing hot air out of a vent or window. ACs don't just cool, they also remove dehumidify, albeit less than a dehumidifier.
A dehumidifier is better at dehumidifying mostly because of the heating that occurs after air blows over the cold coil. By raising the temperature, you raise the air's capacity to take up moisture, which lowers the relative humidity.
So this unit is great for your basement to make sure you don't get mold or rusty tools, but it's not made to make living in a swamp at 110F tolerable - only an AC does that.
We dump the bucket every other night it works so well. Yes it raises the temperature in the room. All dehumidifiers do. This unit also moves A LOT more air with its larger fan so it drops the humidity in a room very quickly. If you run it at nights you don't need to during the day.
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https://youtu.be/ZDoliUn4sfw
You can effectively do the same thing by putting an electric heater in the basement. That is not how all dehumidifiers work.
I trust the bad reviews since they're actually providing photos of temperature probes. Seems like many reviews point that out as a big issue.