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  #1  
Old 10/17/2007, 07:56 PM
FibberMcGee FibberMcGee is offline
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Dedicated Fish room?

Ok guys an gals, not sure if this is the place to ask this question, however if you have a large tank then most likely you have a dedicated room for all of your stuff, equipment, sump etc.... My question is: I am getting a lot of precipitation on my counters and other equipment. It is not dripping wet however it is bother because my room is enclosed with my home furnace. Salt is corrosive so I am concerned about this over a lengthly period of time. It seems that enough of the water is becoming atomized and is getting in the air and collecting on the flat surfaces of my equipment and alike. I am running a humidifier keeping the room at 60% humidity.any other ideas, how do you handle this?
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  #2  
Old 10/17/2007, 08:02 PM
Elliott Elliott is offline
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can you open a window or run an exhaust fan?
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  #3  
Old 10/17/2007, 08:16 PM
PJsStuff PJsStuff is offline
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Are you running a Humidifier or a Dehumidifier??
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  #4  
Old 10/17/2007, 09:02 PM
FibberMcGee FibberMcGee is offline
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Ooops that would be a dehumidifier! and no windows to open, closed basement room.
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  #5  
Old 10/17/2007, 09:05 PM
FibberMcGee FibberMcGee is offline
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I am trying to cut down on the bubbles in my sump, coming from my return and protein skimmer. None are getting back to the tank but enough to atomize some salt in to the air and create a mess.
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  #6  
Old 10/17/2007, 09:24 PM
sullyfish sullyfish is offline
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60% humidity is too high, more like 30% is what you want. if your dehumidifier cannot keep up set up an exhaust fan. Not to strong of a fan to keep from having negative air pressure and CO2 issues from furnace.
Install an A/C vent for the summer since that will dehumidify as well.
  #7  
Old 10/17/2007, 09:31 PM
PJsStuff PJsStuff is offline
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i have my dehumidifier set to 80% and there is no condensation. I also have a 7'x3' sump in there and 200gal of open top RO storage tanks in there too. Also my Skimmer is going 24/7 in there too. Plenty of water. The room is completely sealed also. Its nice and warm in my room tho from the dehumidifier. Is your room cold??
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  #8  
Old 10/17/2007, 09:33 PM
FibberMcGee FibberMcGee is offline
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Thats what I thought for humidity, I just didn't want to be refilling my sump daily. Thanks for the reply.
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  #9  
Old 10/18/2007, 07:19 AM
masharp1126 masharp1126 is offline
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Install a chiller and you can cut down on fans, which contribute to humidity by evaporation.

My tank room has been running about 45% to 48% for the past 6 months. Which I thought was alright, no condensation and just a fraction higher that the rest of my house (North Texas with higher humidity to begin with). Based on where I live, I thought 45 to 48 was okay, what does everyone else think?
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Bldg - 450 g in-wall plywd tank w/ 10'x15' tank room. Eq. to include: 3 400W MH's w/ Lumenarc III reflectors, PFO 400w HQI ballasts, ASM G-5, ASD Calc reactor, and CL on Darts (2 or 3).
  #10  
Old 10/18/2007, 10:13 AM
saltysteven saltysteven is offline
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that room is sealed to tight and thats why you have that build up. and the temp on the other side of the fish room is much cooler. i would vent it into the cooler room to level out the temps more. i also would chech your dehumidifier to see if its working properly. i hooked mine up to my central air a/c automatic drain and i keep it running 24/7. water flows into the a/c drain and automaticaly gets pumped out of the house. the only other thing i can say you could do is install a remote a/c - im really not sure what they re called but the a/c can be installed in any room on any wall and then its vents and water are piped to a open locationin your wall going out. i have one in my office at work and the pipes just run up to the roof. hope this helps
  #11  
Old 10/18/2007, 11:02 AM
RokleM RokleM is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by sullyfish
60% humidity is too high, more like 30% is what you want. if your dehumidifier cannot keep up set up an exhaust fan. Not to strong of a fan to keep from having negative air pressure and CO2 issues from furnace.
Install an A/C vent for the summer since that will dehumidify as well.
30% humidity is very low for most of the states unless you're in a super dry region. I personally wouldn't shoot for this for a number of reasons, evaporation being one, electricity used another. The comfortable "human" level of humidity is 40-55 if I remember correctly. My house runs 40ish, 50 near a bathroom during shower time, and 40-55 in the basement where my 180/sump/frag reside.
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  #12  
Old 10/18/2007, 11:04 AM
FibberMcGee FibberMcGee is offline
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All great ideas, i am cleaning the dehumidifier right now so it is more efficient, and have moved a box fan into the room. Temp has not been a concern just the humidity. Thanks for the replies.
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