Quote Originally Posted by DreadedHermie
Lampost, IMO bringing in outside air just to "dehumidify" your grow is probably a bad idea unless you have state-of-the-art filtration.

55% RH ain't that bad. And it's relative. Hot air can hold a lot more water than cooler air. So you need to look at your RH both lights-on, and lights-off--at your temperature extremes.

This "dry" air you're considering bringing in from outside: what's its temperature? If it's warm enough, it could actually be holding more water than cooler air whose relative humidity is higher. (The cooler air is nearer its "dew point.")

When you're talking about relative humidity, temperature is kinda what it's "relative" to. Gotta consider temp and RH together.

For air circulation, I like a few $5 computer fans in amongst the plants. Run them with cheap wall warts or a DC fan controller ($20-40) to just keep the air moving across / around the leaf surfaces to facilitate O2 / CO2 exchange. At some point in trichome development you may want to stop blowing the leaves so hard that they grind each other's trichs off. :thumbsup:
Thanks! That makes me feel a little better!

I'm ranging now from about 40-50% and temps are 58-72... which is pretty low temps so I think that's good.

I would've always assumed Powdery Mildew thrived in a warm, wet environment. Is that true? I was reading a lot of conflicting info and several sources said that Powdery Mildew actually thrived in cold and wet conditions... I think Cervantes's book says that too... but isn't that guy full often full of shit!?
lampost Reviewed by lampost on . Humidity during Flowering... Well, I know lower humidity is ideal for flowering... I've read about 20-30% RH is ideal. I thought I would be all set because I live in a semi-arid climate and my humidity through veg was about 20-25%. Well now that these plants are big and transpiring they're kicking out a lot of water! I think it's about 45-55% RH now. When do you start having to worry about problems with mold? Rating: 5