![]() Note that the value doesn't need to be an official, absolute humidity value, it simply needs to allow me to compare the intake and exhaust humidities, at different temperatures (but everything else, such as air pressure, etc. I've tried a couple of formulas I've found online but I'm not getting readings that look valid. An "absolute" humidity I guess, or literally the amount of moisture in the air. I'm looking for a formula that will allow me to compare the two humidities, taking their temperature into account. the air coming out of the dryer is much hotter, and because the sensor is giving me relative humidity values, I cannot compare it to the intake humidity (which is room temperature). Unfortunately its not that straight forward. Once the humidity in both was around the same, it would mean that no more moisture is evaporating from the clothes, ie: they're dry. The plan was to compare the exhaust air's humidity against the intake air. ![]() I've developed a device to monitor/control my clothes dryer by monitoring the intake air's humidity & temperature, and the exhaust's humidity and temperature. I'm a software developer (although math isn't my strong point).
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |