Dehumidifier
 

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[Closed] Dehumidifier

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Our trusty ELAD822 went pop yesterday after 6 years of continuous abuse.

I'm looking at an Electriq 16L for about £145 including delivery.

Anyone got any recommendations that I should consider before I buy?

Capacity = 10+ L/24hr

Mostly used for laundry drying so it needs a side exhaust or movable louvers.

Reasonable capacity tank.

Will be used on an open landing off a 4 bed house so it needs to be sized accordingly.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 7:24 am
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ebac

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 8:01 am
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Tumble dryer ?

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 8:07 am
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We've got an EcoAir DD122 that we use for laundry drying. £170 from Amazon. Swinging louvres, laundry settings, ioniser and a silver filter too, whatever that does. Works well, quiet-ish, and glows blue when running.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 9:12 am
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+! for EcoAir.

We've got this model [url= http://www.amazon.co.uk/EcoAir-DD322-Classic-Desiccant-Dehumidifier/dp/B005G7M95G ]EcoAir DD322[/url]. Been used for 4 years now running much of the time in the utility room to dry laundry and bikes.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 9:53 am
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The EcoAir DD322 looks like the current version of the one that just expired. Also, it has a heater which the Electriq 16L doesn't as I have just discovered.

Think I'll go with the EcoAir.

Thanks.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 10:16 am
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How efficient at water extraction are the desiccant models over the condenser type that I'm running? Very interested as the condenser one seems to struggle in the battle against central heating warmth.....doesn't seem to extract as much as I thought it used to (before my in laws borrowed it to dry out a damp room) 🙄

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 11:42 am
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Bookmarked. Been on my to do list for ages.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 11:46 am
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Never had a compressor one, but our recently deceased desiccant unit would pull an impressive amount of moisture out of damp washing.

I can't quantify it, but on a scale of "Meh" to "Wow" it was definitely a "Blimey".

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 12:04 pm
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Desiccant dehumidifiers are more effective when ambient temperatures are low. It doesn't make much of a difference at room temperatures.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 12:16 pm
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Suggsey - Member

How efficient at water extraction are the desiccant models over the condenser type that I'm running? Very interested as the condenser one seems to struggle in the battle against central heating warmth.....doesn't seem to extract as much as I thought it used to (before my in laws borrowed it to dry out a damp room)

Everyone loves a graph...
[img] [/img]

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 12:30 pm
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Recently I bought this from appliances direct (with a discount code by signing up to Which? for £1 trial).

[url= http://www.appliancesdirect.co.uk/p_dd122fw-classic_ecoair-dd122fwclassic-dehumidifier/version.asp?refsource=APadwords&crtag=AP&gclid=CjwKEAiAova1BRDS15OXjcug_FMSJACWNAKZV22srv9gmh9OdqvtX_ZamszfSXi0LOgf34kOdrstwhoCONXw_wcB ]here[/url]

Happy with it so far - it'll take 8 hours on normal laundry setting to get the 1 washing load dry to the touch. As we run our house at ~16°C we went for dessicant rather than compressor.

It's a bit loud but we keep it in the bathroom with the door shut so it's not disturbing to us. Less noisy than the extractor fan we used to have on permanently.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 1:00 pm
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I've been running this one for 4 years* - DIO ELA DD822 8 litre desiccant dehumidifier - possibly not enough capacity for you though.

Normally used for drying washing and keeping the damp away but has also been used for drying out kitchen when it's flooded. It's been faultless so far. Although it does seem to have lost a bit of it's oooomph.

*not constantly but regularly.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 1:38 pm
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That's the one that has just packed up on us.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 1:41 pm
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ah yes. oops. carry on.

EDIT: did you service yours at all, or clean it?

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 1:42 pm
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Hoovered out the filter. Haven't done anything else.

Can it be serviced? Ours shuts down after a couple of minutes with an alarm showing. If I could do something to fix it I could save a pile of cash.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 1:53 pm
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don't know. all we do is clean the filter.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 1:58 pm
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Or look into PPV SYSTEMS instead for about 3-400. Might work better.

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 2:03 pm
 nuke
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We've been using 2 Meaco DD8L (One standard, one Junior model) both bought from here:
http://www.energybulbs.co.uk/meaco+dd8l+8+litre+desiccant+dehumidifier+(meaco+dd8l)/741424608?kw=meaco%20dd8l&fl=733989&ci=83438995102&network=s&pm=&gclid=CLDX26Kz8soCFUqdGwodQDwKRw

...so getting a 3 year guarantee. Good speedy service from them as well.

Both have been fautless so far and the DD8L gets good reviews
The Junior is cheaper as it hasnt got the ioniser & antibacterial filter, neither of which we notice so I'd go with that one if replacing

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 2:12 pm
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Retro83 thanks for the graph, a pictures worth a thousand words and enlightening!
Guess descants the way to go!

 
Posted : 12/02/2016 3:13 pm

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