How can window condensation in a leased condo be dried, if I'll be away for 3 weeks, without towels?












4















I will be leaving my leased condominium in Toronto, Canada for three weeks on 1 Feb. 2019. In cold weather, my window and balcony door sills have pools of water on the floor that sometimes pour into my hardwood floor, much more wringing than the pictures beneath. When I'm here, I sop them up myself. I don't have anyone who can come into my unit daily to soak up.



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Towels don't feel that efficacious to me. Won't they stay water-logged?



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  • 4





    There will likely be much less condensation than usual when you're away. A major source of the moisture is your own breath (as well as any pets and plants).

    – TooTea
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    And your showers, and your cooking. And your humidifier if equipped. Outside air is actually quite dry.

    – Harper
    1 hour ago


















4















I will be leaving my leased condominium in Toronto, Canada for three weeks on 1 Feb. 2019. In cold weather, my window and balcony door sills have pools of water on the floor that sometimes pour into my hardwood floor, much more wringing than the pictures beneath. When I'm here, I sop them up myself. I don't have anyone who can come into my unit daily to soak up.



enter image description here



Towels don't feel that efficacious to me. Won't they stay water-logged?



enter image description here










share|improve this question







New contributor




Amanda d'Halluin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 4





    There will likely be much less condensation than usual when you're away. A major source of the moisture is your own breath (as well as any pets and plants).

    – TooTea
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    And your showers, and your cooking. And your humidifier if equipped. Outside air is actually quite dry.

    – Harper
    1 hour ago
















4












4








4








I will be leaving my leased condominium in Toronto, Canada for three weeks on 1 Feb. 2019. In cold weather, my window and balcony door sills have pools of water on the floor that sometimes pour into my hardwood floor, much more wringing than the pictures beneath. When I'm here, I sop them up myself. I don't have anyone who can come into my unit daily to soak up.



enter image description here



Towels don't feel that efficacious to me. Won't they stay water-logged?



enter image description here










share|improve this question







New contributor




Amanda d'Halluin is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I will be leaving my leased condominium in Toronto, Canada for three weeks on 1 Feb. 2019. In cold weather, my window and balcony door sills have pools of water on the floor that sometimes pour into my hardwood floor, much more wringing than the pictures beneath. When I'm here, I sop them up myself. I don't have anyone who can come into my unit daily to soak up.



enter image description here



Towels don't feel that efficacious to me. Won't they stay water-logged?



enter image description here







condensation






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asked 5 hours ago









Amanda d'HalluinAmanda d'Halluin

1211




1211




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New contributor





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Check out our Code of Conduct.






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Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 4





    There will likely be much less condensation than usual when you're away. A major source of the moisture is your own breath (as well as any pets and plants).

    – TooTea
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    And your showers, and your cooking. And your humidifier if equipped. Outside air is actually quite dry.

    – Harper
    1 hour ago
















  • 4





    There will likely be much less condensation than usual when you're away. A major source of the moisture is your own breath (as well as any pets and plants).

    – TooTea
    5 hours ago






  • 1





    And your showers, and your cooking. And your humidifier if equipped. Outside air is actually quite dry.

    – Harper
    1 hour ago










4




4





There will likely be much less condensation than usual when you're away. A major source of the moisture is your own breath (as well as any pets and plants).

– TooTea
5 hours ago





There will likely be much less condensation than usual when you're away. A major source of the moisture is your own breath (as well as any pets and plants).

– TooTea
5 hours ago




1




1





And your showers, and your cooking. And your humidifier if equipped. Outside air is actually quite dry.

– Harper
1 hour ago







And your showers, and your cooking. And your humidifier if equipped. Outside air is actually quite dry.

– Harper
1 hour ago












3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















3














I agree with tootea our breath is a huge amount of the moisture, next showering and cooking, you won't be doing any of that. Turning the heat down will also help you just need to keep things warm, open up cabinets with plumbing and turn the heat down to 50f maybe lower enough to prevent any pipes from freezing but the lowest temp should also help.






share|improve this answer































    3















    1. Turn on a fan to circulate the air which will remove some of the excess moisture by evaporation.

    2. Change the HVAC filter. A dirty filter will impede air flow.

    3. Turn on the HVAC. This not only cools/heats the room, but also removes humidity.

    4. Get yourself a dehumidifier.






    share|improve this answer































      0















      1. Turn off your furnace's humidifier. Because adding water to the air will cause this.


      2. Get rid of the humans. Their breathing, bathing and cooking is the source.


      The deal is that relative humidity is a different thing than absolute humidity. The difference is, warm air can hold a lot more moisture than cold air.



      You are heating your air, greatly increasing its capacity for moisture. You are then adding moisture by breathing, bathing, cooking, or by running a humidifier if your furnace is equipped with one. That greatly increases the absolute humidity in the air, and it can hold a lot because it's warm.



      Then, the warm air gets near the window, and chills due to contact with the window. This now-colder air has less capacity to hold moisture, it is driven above 100% humidity so it must condense.



      Your house slowly interchanges air with outside through normal leaks (that's why you don't get CO2 poisoning) and it ejects warm, humid air, and intakes subzero, fantastically dry air. Newer homes are much less leaky.



      In this case you only want to heat your home enough to keep the pipes from freezing, and you want enough exchange to eject your wet air and admit cold, very dry air. With you not adding any new moisture, window condensation should stop happening.





      share























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        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes








        3 Answers
        3






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        3














        I agree with tootea our breath is a huge amount of the moisture, next showering and cooking, you won't be doing any of that. Turning the heat down will also help you just need to keep things warm, open up cabinets with plumbing and turn the heat down to 50f maybe lower enough to prevent any pipes from freezing but the lowest temp should also help.






        share|improve this answer




























          3














          I agree with tootea our breath is a huge amount of the moisture, next showering and cooking, you won't be doing any of that. Turning the heat down will also help you just need to keep things warm, open up cabinets with plumbing and turn the heat down to 50f maybe lower enough to prevent any pipes from freezing but the lowest temp should also help.






          share|improve this answer


























            3












            3








            3







            I agree with tootea our breath is a huge amount of the moisture, next showering and cooking, you won't be doing any of that. Turning the heat down will also help you just need to keep things warm, open up cabinets with plumbing and turn the heat down to 50f maybe lower enough to prevent any pipes from freezing but the lowest temp should also help.






            share|improve this answer













            I agree with tootea our breath is a huge amount of the moisture, next showering and cooking, you won't be doing any of that. Turning the heat down will also help you just need to keep things warm, open up cabinets with plumbing and turn the heat down to 50f maybe lower enough to prevent any pipes from freezing but the lowest temp should also help.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered 4 hours ago









            Ed BealEd Beal

            32.1k12145




            32.1k12145

























                3















                1. Turn on a fan to circulate the air which will remove some of the excess moisture by evaporation.

                2. Change the HVAC filter. A dirty filter will impede air flow.

                3. Turn on the HVAC. This not only cools/heats the room, but also removes humidity.

                4. Get yourself a dehumidifier.






                share|improve this answer




























                  3















                  1. Turn on a fan to circulate the air which will remove some of the excess moisture by evaporation.

                  2. Change the HVAC filter. A dirty filter will impede air flow.

                  3. Turn on the HVAC. This not only cools/heats the room, but also removes humidity.

                  4. Get yourself a dehumidifier.






                  share|improve this answer


























                    3












                    3








                    3








                    1. Turn on a fan to circulate the air which will remove some of the excess moisture by evaporation.

                    2. Change the HVAC filter. A dirty filter will impede air flow.

                    3. Turn on the HVAC. This not only cools/heats the room, but also removes humidity.

                    4. Get yourself a dehumidifier.






                    share|improve this answer














                    1. Turn on a fan to circulate the air which will remove some of the excess moisture by evaporation.

                    2. Change the HVAC filter. A dirty filter will impede air flow.

                    3. Turn on the HVAC. This not only cools/heats the room, but also removes humidity.

                    4. Get yourself a dehumidifier.







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 4 hours ago









                    Jerry_ContraryJerry_Contrary

                    5167




                    5167























                        0















                        1. Turn off your furnace's humidifier. Because adding water to the air will cause this.


                        2. Get rid of the humans. Their breathing, bathing and cooking is the source.


                        The deal is that relative humidity is a different thing than absolute humidity. The difference is, warm air can hold a lot more moisture than cold air.



                        You are heating your air, greatly increasing its capacity for moisture. You are then adding moisture by breathing, bathing, cooking, or by running a humidifier if your furnace is equipped with one. That greatly increases the absolute humidity in the air, and it can hold a lot because it's warm.



                        Then, the warm air gets near the window, and chills due to contact with the window. This now-colder air has less capacity to hold moisture, it is driven above 100% humidity so it must condense.



                        Your house slowly interchanges air with outside through normal leaks (that's why you don't get CO2 poisoning) and it ejects warm, humid air, and intakes subzero, fantastically dry air. Newer homes are much less leaky.



                        In this case you only want to heat your home enough to keep the pipes from freezing, and you want enough exchange to eject your wet air and admit cold, very dry air. With you not adding any new moisture, window condensation should stop happening.





                        share




























                          0















                          1. Turn off your furnace's humidifier. Because adding water to the air will cause this.


                          2. Get rid of the humans. Their breathing, bathing and cooking is the source.


                          The deal is that relative humidity is a different thing than absolute humidity. The difference is, warm air can hold a lot more moisture than cold air.



                          You are heating your air, greatly increasing its capacity for moisture. You are then adding moisture by breathing, bathing, cooking, or by running a humidifier if your furnace is equipped with one. That greatly increases the absolute humidity in the air, and it can hold a lot because it's warm.



                          Then, the warm air gets near the window, and chills due to contact with the window. This now-colder air has less capacity to hold moisture, it is driven above 100% humidity so it must condense.



                          Your house slowly interchanges air with outside through normal leaks (that's why you don't get CO2 poisoning) and it ejects warm, humid air, and intakes subzero, fantastically dry air. Newer homes are much less leaky.



                          In this case you only want to heat your home enough to keep the pipes from freezing, and you want enough exchange to eject your wet air and admit cold, very dry air. With you not adding any new moisture, window condensation should stop happening.





                          share


























                            0












                            0








                            0








                            1. Turn off your furnace's humidifier. Because adding water to the air will cause this.


                            2. Get rid of the humans. Their breathing, bathing and cooking is the source.


                            The deal is that relative humidity is a different thing than absolute humidity. The difference is, warm air can hold a lot more moisture than cold air.



                            You are heating your air, greatly increasing its capacity for moisture. You are then adding moisture by breathing, bathing, cooking, or by running a humidifier if your furnace is equipped with one. That greatly increases the absolute humidity in the air, and it can hold a lot because it's warm.



                            Then, the warm air gets near the window, and chills due to contact with the window. This now-colder air has less capacity to hold moisture, it is driven above 100% humidity so it must condense.



                            Your house slowly interchanges air with outside through normal leaks (that's why you don't get CO2 poisoning) and it ejects warm, humid air, and intakes subzero, fantastically dry air. Newer homes are much less leaky.



                            In this case you only want to heat your home enough to keep the pipes from freezing, and you want enough exchange to eject your wet air and admit cold, very dry air. With you not adding any new moisture, window condensation should stop happening.





                            share














                            1. Turn off your furnace's humidifier. Because adding water to the air will cause this.


                            2. Get rid of the humans. Their breathing, bathing and cooking is the source.


                            The deal is that relative humidity is a different thing than absolute humidity. The difference is, warm air can hold a lot more moisture than cold air.



                            You are heating your air, greatly increasing its capacity for moisture. You are then adding moisture by breathing, bathing, cooking, or by running a humidifier if your furnace is equipped with one. That greatly increases the absolute humidity in the air, and it can hold a lot because it's warm.



                            Then, the warm air gets near the window, and chills due to contact with the window. This now-colder air has less capacity to hold moisture, it is driven above 100% humidity so it must condense.



                            Your house slowly interchanges air with outside through normal leaks (that's why you don't get CO2 poisoning) and it ejects warm, humid air, and intakes subzero, fantastically dry air. Newer homes are much less leaky.



                            In this case you only want to heat your home enough to keep the pipes from freezing, and you want enough exchange to eject your wet air and admit cold, very dry air. With you not adding any new moisture, window condensation should stop happening.






                            share











                            share


                            share










                            answered 2 mins ago









                            HarperHarper

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                            68.6k344139






















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