If there are heat producing devices in the room, it sounds implausible
for condensation to occur in significant amounts unless the climate is
very, very humid.
RH sensors are often very inaccurate, but you can get the indoor dew
point from the RH and the temperature[1], and if the floor is warmer
My guess is that your floor is not insulated. The air temperature in
the room is higher than a temperature of the floor, hence, the floor
starts sweating. Where are your temperature sensors installed? Do you
have one of them measuring the air temperature in the room and the
other located on the flo
5:13 PM
> To: Lorell Hathcock
> Cc: 'NANOG list'
> Subject: Re: Environmental Graph Interpretation
>
> On Tue, 10 Nov 2015 16:48:04 -0600, "Lorell Hathcock" said:
> > Are there any one the list that would care to take a look at some
> > graphs of temp
: Lorell Hathcock
Cc: 'NANOG list'
Subject: Re: Environmental Graph Interpretation
On Tue, 10 Nov 2015 16:48:04 -0600, "Lorell Hathcock" said:
> Are there any one the list that would care to take a look at some
> graphs of temperature, relative humidity and dew
On Tue, 10 Nov 2015 16:48:04 -0600, "Lorell Hathcock" said:
> Are there any one the list that would care to take a look at some graphs of
> temperature, relative humidity and dew point that I have for two locations.
> In one of the two locations, I'm having a problem with the floor getting wet
> (c
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