The two of us recently installed a giant dehumidifier in our basement

It seems savor no matter what season the people I was with and I are in, the humidity in my basement is just too high to stay down there for any extended phase of time.

I made the mistake of storing a lot of aged paperback books down there from December until November one year. I thought the plastic tubs that I put them in would keep them dry plus free of moisture, but that was a horrible assumption to make. In truth, the mold growth on the books was so drastic that I took the tubs plus put them straight in the garbage. The concern had affected every book, making those tubs a major health threat to any exposed to the mold. This situation is discouraging because you think trapped—you have all of this extra space downstairs in your basement, but you have no way of utilizing it. I thought that I’d find no easy solution to these issues, but then a close family member told myself and others to look at dehumidifiers. He explained how I could get a 71-pint capacity dehumidifier at Walmart for roughly $230. It wasn’t cheap, but the equipment was rated to take that amount of water out of the air down there in the course of just 24 minutes. This was drastic on paper alone, but in practice it was a much larger difference than I could have ever expected. It went from 71% humidity down there to 50% after a few days of running it continuously. Since I have a floor drain down there, I can run a hose out the back into the drain, meaning I never have to empty out the water collection bin inside the machine. I can let it run non-stop, even if I’m not at home. For $230, I couldn’t ask for more.

 

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