Forum Discussion
babock
May 17, 2019Explorer
ajriding wrote:Incorrect. The heat content of humid air is higher than dry air. The cooling fins not only cool the air but have to condense the water contained in the air. More BTUs are required to lower the temp of moist air vs dry air. It's not a lot but it is definitely more.
Relative humidity will have very little effect on cooling of the fridge.
Unlike a person, who perspires through skin water evaporation, the fridge only conducts heat away. The fridge will cool almost the same in dry and in humid air.
The differences will be less than 2%; un-perceivable if just measuring your temperature in the fridge.
You problems lie elsewhere.
Has nothing to do with the way the skin feels during low or high humidity.
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