At that temp wouldn't the moisture in the air just freeze on everything. Thick frost? Normally wouldn't that cold air be at a low humidity.Scoville DeVille said:hey hey hey this is serious
shit.
8:20 PM, -3ºF, 92%H
This shit is interesting you bastages!
Scoville DeVille said:hey hey hey this is serious shit.
8:20 PM, -3ºF, 92%H
This shit is interesting you bastages!
Yes. Mostly. Here we call it Rime. All the trees are white and everthing else above ground. The other thing about our humidity is that our sensor is covered with snow so the reading is probably exagerated. Our other sensor, that's on the porch under cover, is reading 35% which is why there is no Rime this morning. Our primary sensor is still reading 92%. It's 20 feet up so I can clear the snow out of it. It's kind of a cup thing that also measures rainfall.Wimpy69 said:At that temp wouldn't the moisture in the air just freeze on everything. Thick frost? Normally wouldn't that cold air be at a low humidity.
Huh? :Rofl:stettoman said:and a 3 500 gallon tank winter became a 1-and-a-fraction tank winter instantly.
See, that's why this thread is awesome. I never really knew wtf "dew point" was.Hybrid Mode 01 said:Folks, Scovie's reading of 92% humidity refers to relative humidity. Meaning the air currently contains 92% of what it could possibly hold at that temp. It just means that the dewpoint is only a few degrees cooler than the current temp. 100% relative humidity can occur at any temp.
And Scovie, we heat with natural gas provided by the city and by beans.
Hybrid Mode 01 said:Folks, Scovie's reading of 92% humidity refers to relative humidity. Meaning the air currently contains 92% of what it could possibly hold at that temp. It just means that the dewpoint is only a few degrees cooler than the current temp. 100% relative humidity can occur at any temp.
And Scovie, we heat with natural gas provided by the city and by beans.