MegaSack DRAW - This year's winner is user - rgwb
We will be in touch
I have 2 2 litre dehumidifiers running in my flat as part of my rental contract due to lack of venting during construction- due to traffic noise.
They are on sensors and usually on 4 hours most days to allow us to dry clothes and stop the house getting damp
ballpark figure - whats this likely to be costing a month ?
Find out the dehumidier's wattage then plug it in here:
[url] http://www.ukpower.co.uk/tools/running_costs_electricity/ [/url]
I use one to reduce humidity when being forced to dry clothes inside - it actually helps with the drying IMO. I have not noticed a big impact on the leccy bill.
Cheers - will do that when i get home .....first leccy bill is due in - wondered what it may be with these in haha
Our clothes dont dry without it. And due to work constraints i cant get stuff outside on the shared green. Dark when i leave and dark when i get home +guaranteed to rain most days.... Does make a huge difference. Can leave clothes on the horse for a week and they will still be wet without dehumidifiers.....the joys of living on a main road .....
>whats this likely to be costing a month ?
Dunno offhand, but judging by the desiccating unit I've got in an outbuilding in the garden (tools/bikes/plants), you may find your flat heating isn't on as much as it would be otherwise. I've found the byproduct of using it, is that it keeps the place at a low but even/frost-free temperature over the winter, and seems a lot cheaper than using the storage heater that's already in there.
I run one pretty much constantly through the winter for the same reasons. Not noticed a huge impact, but hard to tell as I've always had to do it in this flat! However as above, whichever room I put it in does get a lot warmer - the heater can often be completely off in that room, which will compensate so some extent I'd imagine.
