Temperature difference is causing condensation
Temperature difference is causing condensation
For the past month or so it has been insanely tepid outside, then my buddy and I normally get some tepid days during the summer, however you can correctly count on the month of June being more pleasant than the subsequent summer time months – not this year.
We’ve had 90 degree days nonstop since the first days of June, plus everyone has been using their air conditioning units like absurd to compensate for the heat plus humidity.
It’s been an costly month for Heating plus A/C usage, plus we’re all upset about the excessive utility bills that are coming our way. That being said, no one I know is slowing down their AC usage in the least, because the alternative is to broil alive in our tiny apartments. I’m harshly grateful for the modern air conditioning units that we bought recently, because they are keeping the indoor air temperature much colder than we’ve been able to achieve in the past years. In fact, it’s been so delightfully cold indoors that sometimes I’ve been too cold at home. I keep wrapping myself in sweatshirts until I have to step outdoors, at which point it’s a mad rush to tear off any extra layers to deal with the summer time heat. The temperature difference between the two environments has been so extreme that I’ve even noticed some absurd condensation in the windows lately. The cold air from the air conditioning is producing moisture inside the window frames. I see this as both a blessing plus a curse, because I’m not enthusiastic to deal with the subsequent mold problem in a few months.