ᐅ Dry indoor air

Created on: 23 Nov 2008 08:17
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Hello,
we have a nice living room with a fireplace, but when we heat the room, the air becomes very dry. You can tell by the dry nose, which I find quite uncomfortable. What can be done to increase the humidity in the air?
D
Dämmunsinn-1
15 May 2011 12:28
Hertweck schrieb:
How do you actually come to your conclusions – personal experience, education, verifiable experiments? I'm very interested.

Hello

Where is the interest?

Have a nice Sunday

dämmunsinn
D
Dämmunsinn-1
5 Jan 2012 16:06
Hello everyone, wishing you all a Happy New Year!

Yes, Dämmunsinn is still thriving wonderfully in dry air!
I found something else, have a look here!
"Club of Home" – News – about a persistent misunderstanding

Best regards
Dämmunsinn
construction worker
M
MODERATOR
5 Jan 2012 16:36
Hello Dämmunsinn,

People are definitely still interested in indoor air quality; however, they might not necessarily want to discuss it with you.

The mixing of well-known physical facts with trivial matters and layperson knowledge—especially in the text you recommended—reminds me a lot of 9/11 conspiracy theories. Not in terms of content, of course, but in terms of tone.

Wishing you a Happy New Year as well, and may you continue to enjoy dry air.
D
Dämmunsinn-1
3 Feb 2012 09:58
Hello

How are you doing at the moment?

Please don’t leave your damp houses, because the outside air is really bone dry! Otherwise, you might dry out even more.

Dry air is truly wonderful to breathe. We construction workers notice this because we spend the whole day outside!

Wishing you nicely dry air

Dämmunsinn 😉
M
MODERATOR
3 Feb 2012 22:19
Hello,
this back-and-forth posting is a bit strange... What exactly are we referring to when we say "moist" or "dry" air?
In my room, the relative humidity is currently 53%, which is fine. The "others" will probably not live in houses with 70–80% relative humidity, I think that would be unusual. And they certainly won’t live with 30% relative humidity, right?

This discussion should be based on measurable values; just saying "dry" or "moist" doesn't help anyone.
D
Dämmunsinn-1
4 Feb 2012 00:15
Hello

Dry air contains 0 parts per thousand absolute humidity! With this dry air, a person can release 40 grams of water per kilogram of inhaled air. If they breathe air with 20 parts per thousand (20 grams), they can only release 20 grams of water per kilogram of air. This is almost unbearable for a person.

Best regards from
Dämmunsinn