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 floor? What readings they show? I'd use a temp. gun to measure the floor temp (if you have only one sensor installed). and see if you have a considerable temp. difference between those two readings. I'd say you won't have this problem if you insulate the floor (if possible). Another option is A/C - it will help to control the temp and decrease humidity. A dehumidifier should help too but it wouldn't be my choice... On Tue, Nov 10, 2015 at 10:48 PM, Lorell Hathcock <lorell@hathcock.org> wrote:
NANOG:
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 (condensation?). At the other everything is just fine.
I need to understand what these graphs are telling me about the problem and if a simple dehumidifier would solve my moisture problem.
Any takers?
Oh, the environmental monitor I installed in each location is the IT Watchdog from Geist Global. I bought the POE version. Installed like a charm and was $229 plus shipping.
I do wonder if this question is off topic, but then I can hear myself saying "Hey, I'm Operating a Network, here! In North America!" And then I think, "Yep, on topic!"
Thanks,
Sincerely,
Lorell Hathcock
SolStar Network, LLC
Communications
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