![]() With enough of a temperature drop, you could see moisture buildup around your lights, which is a sign of humidity fluctuation Grow room humidity can’t be that bad, can it? A little more or a little less humidity in your grow room won’t hurt much as long as it’s within 40-70%. ![]() ![]() If it’s warm in your grow room and you turn the lights off, temps will dropdown. If you use Co2 in your grow, that grow room humidity level will rise even more Grow equipment can also raise the temperature in your grow area like your grow lights. The carbon dioxide (Co2) that plants naturally give off can raise grow room temperatures, and that will result in moisture build-up which will raise humidity. Lower temps can be tricky because too much moisture can result in moisture build-up and/or freezing not enough moisture and it can get bone dry like the desert in winter. Without heat the movement of water vapor slows down, covering less area, resulting in less grow room humidity. The lower the temperatures are in your grow, the less water vapor air can hold.That's why when there's lots of moisture and it gets hot (like near swamps) it gets sticky and muggy: there's warm water all through the air moving quickly. Heat also causes water to move faster through the air, covering more area, resulting in higher grow room humidity. The higher the temperature in your grow, the more water vapor the air can hold. ![]() Water vapor's always in the air, but the temperature of your grow room effects the presence of humidity in your garden: Humidity is a measurement of the amount of water vapor in the air. ![]()
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