ironman70 said:My biggest problem is having to replace the wicks. I usually go through one every two - three weeks. I have pretty hard water (even after a filter and water softner)...
richkorn said:O Answer 5 - Don't need one. With no OAK I get a constant exchange of healthy air in the house and therefore do not get dry stagnant air
ghandy131 said:richkorn said:O Answer 5 - Don't need one. With no OAK I get a constant exchange of healthy air in the house and therefore do not get dry stagnant air
Just an FYI - OAKS have nothing to do with inside air. They are supplying air for combustion only. This exterior air does not enter your living area. Your inside air is circulated through the heat exchanger and resubmitted to the living area with no introduction of new air (unless you don't have an OAK or live in a drafty house).
noelp68 said:ok so I have a nice air-o-swiss humidifer and I like using it, however when I use it , it turns my ng range flame orange, it's not even in the same room. Anyone out there know why this happens?
Clay H said:Here is one I was looking at that has decent reviews. Hold alot of water so it wouldnt be to much hassle to use I dont think.
Also need to get a Relative Humidity gauge so I know what it actually is.
http://www.amazon.com/Lasko-1128-Ev...-Humidifier/dp/B000VP7FWA/ref=pd_sim_sbs_hg_2
ghandy131 said:richkorn said:O Answer 5 - Don't need one. With no OAK I get a constant exchange of healthy air in the house and therefore do not get dry stagnant air
Just an FYI - OAKS have nothing to do with inside air. They are supplying air for combustion only. This exterior air does not enter your living area. Your inside air is circulated through the heat exchanger and resubmitted to the living area with no introduction of new air (unless you don't have an OAK or live in a drafty house).
richkorn said:ghandy131 said:richkorn said:O Answer 5 - Don't need one. With no OAK I get a constant exchange of healthy air in the house and therefore do not get dry stagnant air
Just an FYI - OAKS have nothing to do with inside air. They are supplying air for combustion only. This exterior air does not enter your living area. Your inside air is circulated through the heat exchanger and resubmitted to the living area with no introduction of new air (unless you don't have an OAK or live in a drafty house).
I understand that of course. What i am saying is that since I have no oak, my stove is pulling fresh air into the house from all those cracks, therefore constantly replenishing my inside home air. Which of course, without an oak, goes up the pellet vent back to the outside because the house air is the combustion source. A continuous cycle of replenished fresh air in the house. With an oak this would not happen since outside fresh air is not being sucked in through any cracks. That's where the air can get dry and stagnant.
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