People don't really cares much about water damage like this in Guangdong much, at least to my experience. The wall will get wet every year and it is a natural occurrence. But it sure make life a bit difficult when it is raining inside or some wall paint falling on you, making everything covers in white dust.
Correct, and despite all of it being preventable by creating quality housing, China has a "never fix it" mentality so they just keep tearing stuff down and replacing it with new tofu buildings.
@@st20332 Yeah, this year is pretty bad but what I mean is that there are going to be moist/water damage on wall and molds every year. So people are used to those kinds of things so it isn't really like a "huge damage". That's the point. Things will get wet and moldy, even when things aren't as bad as this year's.
as a florida native, I felt the same way when i went to live in the desert for a short time. It felt like the air was so thin because there was almost zero humidity, i wondered how people could breathe normally.
@@MrBlack-vd2ws The pollution in Southern China is not as bad as it is in some of the Northern cities. Most Southern cities have pretty clean air. You can look at a pollution map of China and see that this is the case. These cities usually have AQI of around 20-50 year round and can be lower than some of the suburbs in the US. Its not like these places are rural farmlands either. Yes it is pretty bad in Northern China, but don't just generalize such a big country.
As someone from SETX, the best part is when you're trying to drive at night in 100% humidity, and the windshield fogs up so bad, you literally cant see your own hood. You have to put AC on full blast + recirculate to dry out the interior, and if its cold outside, you suffer. Same with houses too.
Yeah. I’m from Northeast Texas and the humidity here hovers from 70-90% normally. It’s 97% humidity right now, but thankfully it’s somewhat cool outside. I know for a fact I’ve seen it that high during the summer though lol, it was terrible.
I hate when we enter the spring. The constant mowing because the grass is ALWAYS dewy if not sprinkled on and the +90% humidity multiplied by mosquitos and I just talked myself into paying for lawn care this year.
You know you can get the same effect, running the AC plus recirculate, with the temperature set for warm air? No need to make yourself suffer blowing cold air.
What do you do to even prevent injury in something like this? seems like only thing you can/should do is just lay down and be as still as possible to not generate sweat, and find a way to remove moisture as much as you can.
30 degrees at 100% humidity is tough but not deadly yet. Over 37 degrees at 100% humidity is. Because your sweat cannot evaporate basically and you cannot regulate your body temperature anymore leading to overheating.
I live in Shenzhen and I easily avoided this humidity vapor issue by simply shutting all the windows and turn on the AC to dehydrate the house and kept everything dry. It’s pretty much common knowledge for locals.
I've lived in Brazil my whole life and I've never seen anything like this, not even in the city of Manaus, in the heart of the Amazon, a humidity level of 100% was recorded.
@@matheusb.r.461 There are trees in cities and forests around them in China, mostly in the southeast and the northeast. The north and west have deserts, yet their government has different plans or they had already made them to reforest or turn deserts into forests. People is also motivated or even paid to plant trees. There are other projects already made or planned for building what's called Vertical Forests, building apartments with trees on the sides of every floor. There's actual governmental support with funds and support for these green projects, while in other parts, it's only buzz to get support.
The real shocker is the dye running down the walls. So if that decoration ever found itself in the gutter or trash can, or landfill too I guess, the red ink would mossy along to drain somewhere else.
I've experienced 100% air humidity in the Netherlands, during an extremely hot spring (something that is becoming increasingly prevalent), and it felt *awful* because no amount of sweating helped with temperature regulation, and water from the cold tap came out *lukewarm* but we were fortunate that our houses were insulated enough to not get water condensing on the ceilings! Unfortunately... Dutch homes, or even most European homes beyond the Mediterranean tend to not have any AC installed by default. The Netherlands used to have much colder winters, so our insulation philosophy is to keep warmth IN.
Living in a tropical country, humidity is always there and it just make things hotter like a natural sauna. Though the bright side is that your skin isn't going to dry that easily but still drink water because you will be sweating.
@@TheRanguna I don't need to read Wikipedia. I have my own sauna. Dry heat is what true sauna is all about. The humidity rarely reaches 50%. Turkish bath is wet, on the other hand.
I was not well informed to have a dehumidifier many years back, and our walls would get damp and grow mould. Now we have one in the living room and one in each bedroom. It sure makes a big difference. And it sure helps with the AC as well.
@@kismetauthey said they weren't well informed, and they had mould. (In the past) _NOW_ , they have de humidifiers . They learnt from that experience and are more informed now.
@@kismetau English isn't their native language, so I took it to mean they didn't know about dehumidifiers and how they could help. They now know about them and are using them to reduce the humidity indoor. While I could be wrong that is my interpretation of what they said. One thing to note is that water from a dehumidify is clean and can be used for drinking.
Where I live, we have stretches in the summer of 40+ days of between 38°C and 46°C at 54% to 60% humidity. But I’ve never seen water dripping off the ceiling 😬.
Never imagined it. Even me as a 3rd worlder, humidity stays at 60% to 70% at most. Stuffs that placed on your concrete floors starts to get moist and that's it. At night, concrete houses starts to cool-off. Not to mention, we only have electric fans and ceiling fans to tide through the intense heat.
This is insane 😅, it’s like it rained in the building 😮. All the books are wet, you can’t have P.E class at school. This is hard😢, but now the bad weather is gone were I live😊
@@StanleySuperXYou clean surfaces regularly, inside and out No popcorn ceilings, flat surfaces only Rugs get washed It's honestly not that difficult really, just once every few weeks
Wow, that’s worse than what it was in Zhuhai a few weeks ago, when water was covering all the floors of our university. However, that is not uncommon for March. Not every year, but it happens around this time some years.
Idk for other east/southeast Asian households, but we always use the dehumidifier during spring just to combat this kind of weather. It’s especially nice if you have a small apartment since a small dehumidifier is sufficient (I live in Hong Kong so most of us live in small apartments)
I don't know about other SEA countries, but here in *most* part of my country Indonesia (part of SEA nations), i said most because our country is too big to say everything the same We don't have that thing, "dehumidifier" thingy, we just live like usual, probably because of our country is under the Equator Line We don't have other season except Dry and Wet (like Rain), since its a Tropical country, so we don't have winter, spring, summer, autumn etc seasons in here But some part of our country has a cold temperature, but it doesn't have any bad news like people died of cold, unless you got caught up on Hypothermia especially on a mountain but that's very rare About the Humid, in here its more like dry than humid, sometimes only foggy, but its because of pollution back then is really bad, but now? Not so much, because we tried to reduce the amount of pollution So i don't know about other SEA countries, wether they have the same problem as yours or the same things goes just like ours 👍
Im certain they are doing this too there. But its way more then their dehumidifying systems can handle. Dont underestimate how freaking much water air can store.
@@kurohanamaiki5344 sampeyan tinggal buka aja Google, cari aja cuaca, muncul kok kelembapan nya brp. Indonesia tingkat kelembabannya pasti tinggi karena negara tropis dan di dekat laut. Misal sama-sama 28 derajat, kelembapan 90% pasti rasanya lebih panas dibanding kelembaban 60%. Makanya di pegunungan, kl abis hujan dan lembab justru tidak berasa begitu dingin dibanding cuaca cerah (ketika suhunya sama).
回南天 (hui nan tian) is an annual occurence in Guangzhou where I live. The humidity has been insane, but fortunately, the temperature hasn't been too hot. Soon the temperature is going to rise quite a bit and combined with the humidity, it creates very hot and stuffy weather.
I live in a place where the annual high average is 90% humidity and temperatures can get much higher than 30c. Arguably- this is only March, but it goes to show how infrastructurally deprecated China is compared to even poorer areas of other tropical regions such as the Lower American bible belt or some place like Florida.
This isn't normal weather, buildings aren't designed for conditions you don't expect. It's like saying it's poor infrastructure if your florida house is damaged by extreme cold, it isn't something the building is designed for
@@xaiano794 except these areas of china do routinely see this weather- only later in the year. These areas of china have their hot wet seasons it just isn't usually in march. But that means the buildings should be built for it. Also, our homes in the south can withstand freezing temps, but our power infrastructure doesn't like snow much arguably. Enjoy your social credit score for defending tofu dreg
@andrewgill1332 stop how come it hasn't been in the media if, as you claim, its normal for these conditions to occur just later in the year? And total BS, my friend works as a plumber and if severe freezing temperatures ever hit florida, 90% of the pipes would burst.
Wow 😮 Even living in tropical country amidst 32°C and ~80% humidity without AC and humidifier, I haven't seen something like this (except if there's a leaky roof under a stormy weather but you could just fix the structure and it's gone). Couldn't imagine the struggle in living their daily life.
@@Ducky_Yum_Yum If you live in the tropics, 100% humidity happens a lot. You really only see condensation when it's raining. But it's not this bad. Maybe there are other factors why they experienced extreme condensation.
@@Xynic48they say it went up to 30°C, I think there was already 100% humidity or close to it before cooling down. Would be a lot worse than if it was just 100% humidity on a normal day.
you mean 100% right? there can’t be more than 100% humidity, 100% humidity means the air cannot hold any more vapor. it is the saturation point and is a hard line. :) there is absolute humidity, which can go past 100%, but it is used in baking and is not relevant..
@@AnimaRandomthen you don’t live in central Europe. In spring and fall/autumn it’s foggy at least once a week over here. Sometimes so much that you can’t even see things that are 5 meters away.
It's kinda weird to be honest,I live in a country where it's almost 32c 80% humidity where the air feels incredibly warm and sticky and suffocating even when u just took a bathe 5 mins ago but I have never witnessed condensation form on the surface like that in my life....unless it's cold and if it's cold inside like air conditioned place it wouldn't form like that either.....condensation forms on the outside, the only situation that droplets can form like that is if there is no air flow, and ur taking a hot steamy shower or it's a gd sauna or something..... But the whole thing boggles my mind.....first of all wood or concrete surfaces don't sweat or form condensation like that,and if it's that warm and humid out there,stay in ur concrete apartment room and shut the windows and make sure ur windows are dark and tinted or draw the curtains from morning till night,it will keep the hot humid air out and trust me ur room will be much more comfortably cooler and dark than outside. At night wait till it's like 11pm or 12 midnight when it's finally somewhat "cooler" then open the windows.....at 8pm the air still feels like a sauna outside..... Or just get a air con or air dehumidifier,I dunno what these folks are doing. The only reason it forms droplets like that my guess is these guys are in some wacky place In the desert in china or something,where at night the temperature falls by 10c at night and is extremely cold and it "rains" indoors. Otherwise keep the windows shut all day and stay indoors u will be fine.
At 100% humidity the slightest temperature difference (the inside being cooler than the outside) will lead to condensation forming, due to the inability of the air to hold water.
I think you hit the nail on the head with "no airflow". many of china's cities are overcrowded and poorly constructed and they probably lack the building codes to ensure that the buildings are properly ventilated.
Major sweating without moving. I’ve been in south Korea doing an installation and felt the wrath of their humidity. But I was mostly in a temp controlled clean room. I also experienced their rain storms where each drop was like a cup of water
What people have to understand is humidity is relative. I also live in a place where the relative humidity is high, but the temperature is low. 100% humidity at 30C is lot more water in the air than 100% humidity at 5C. 100% humidity at 5C is actually super dry. What is happening here is the inside the house is slightly cooler than outside. Someone opens the windows or balcony doors, hot humid air rushes in. The slight drop in temperature squeezes all the water out. Hot air can hold more moisture than cold air.
This is a great answer, people forget that it's RELATIVE humidity. and that yes hot air can hold a lot more water in it than cold. So 100% humidity (air can't hold any more water) at high temps, that's a lot more water being released on everything and tiny temperature changes can make for big bad results. Close all the windows and buy a dehumidifier.
Yes it's like Vancouver which gets tons of rain from fall all the way through winter, but our humidity is super low. And in the summer it gets quite hot but it's super dry, so humidity is also low. It's just a low humidity place all around. In fact if you like rain and not overly hot summers the weather is just about perfect
We get this kind of humidity in the southeast of the US all the time. We have air conditioners so it's not humid inside and water doesn't condense on every ceiling and wall. This is humidity + no AC and leaving the windows open.
I’m confused, there are other places in the world with 100% relative humidity as well but without the insane amount of water everywhere. Is there a reason for that in particular?
Im not sure but its probably because of rapid changing temperature, from cold and sudden warming may cause this. Where i live, 100% humidity can occur but because its always warm,so it never becomes like this. I guess this is why it occurs more in places where its like the tropics but still get quite cold weather like northern vietnam/ south China.
Yeah, it has to be temperature changes. The air temperature rises, but the buildings take time to warm from the sun. So when saturated air comes into contact with cold walls and ceilings, it condenses.
It is also relative humidity, not absolute. Warm air can hold more water than cold air. So 100% humidity at 35C will have a lot more water in the air than 100% humidity at 5C so there will naturally be more condensation forming.
I've only experienced this once when I visited Guangzhou maybe back in early 2000s. I think it was around March or April when I visited. Water was dripping from the ceiling and have to be careful walking due to wet marble floors all over the place. Quite interesting being from LA lol
Anything that relies purely on electricity to work, is a dumb idea. What if CME hits the earth and the power grid goes down? Your electric cars and fingerprint locks will stop working, you won't even be able to get inside your own home.
Da heck? 95% humidity is like a daily normal in my country but no where i have seen water droplets just appearing on walls like that. Is 5% that big a difference lol
@@roku_nine how does the indoor humidity look like a burst pipe ha djust happend while the outside is cold? Im unable to grasp the logic. Even if its true…wouldn’t opening the window fix or atleast negate the level of humidity?
@@mobgaming1271 try leaving your refrigerator door open just a little and see what happen tomorrow. opening the window should help .i guess people in the video didn't open them. 🤷
Not common everywhere. It needs a change in temperature (either the AC or the outside) Maybe they have air conditioning, so there walls are cold, but they had a window or door open or a leak in the AC. So the humidity from the hot outside got in and quickly cooled and condensed when it touched a cold wall. Or they had the AC shut off (more water held in hot air) and they later turned it on for the night (the water had to condense now that the air is cold) Works exactly like morning dew you’d see outdoors or on foggy days or your shower mirror
I lived in rural Alabama for a year..we had 100% humidity often. My house never looked like this inside> Sure we had AC but there were areas it didn't reach like the garage and the bathroom.
You cannot have relative humidity beyond 100%, it's called dew point where the water must then condensate into dew. Probably the absolute humidity in your case was never very high to begin with. In the Chinese case the wind coming in from the seas at higher temperature (that can carry more humidity) settles into a place with the temperature drops significantly (like from 30 to 10), condensating the water molecules very quickly.
@@RiantoFatma He didn't say above 100%. And as someone who lived in Alabama, yes it very often hits 90% and above in the Summer, and hits 100% multiple times a year. Swamplands are humid.
it's a annual thing for them at guangdong😂cause of the sudden shift of temp from cold to hot in a short time period. basically what happens when you took out a can of coke from fridge, and u'll see it happen in front of you, but this at much larger scale
I think the problem is in large part due to no or very little insulation. 100% relative humidity is not that big a deal. Ask anyone in south Louisiana or in Oregon.
for this kind of humidity, you need atleast a couple of dehumidifiers (which most families in Hong Kong have at home), and couple of ACs on at the same time, this is extreme humidity 😂
@@JL_hahaha0303 I am from North Carolina, US where it’s 32-37 all Summer with many days being 100% humidity (yes, daysss in a row) and we have central air conditioning through the whole house and it never gets wet inside. 😂 We also never use dehumidifiers. Also, to each person who keeps doubting me, come live where I live and you’ll see. 😌
@@park.jasmin333I doubt that 100% you are claiming, if it truly was 100% humidity you wouldn't be able to see anything beyond 300 meters. And every car would need to have wind shield wipers activated whilst driving on a hot summer day to prevent condensation on their windshield. People would be covered in damp moisture to their underwear within hours. I'm guessing it's near the 90-95 mark.
I don’t feel sorry for drug dealers going through this humidity moisture renewing their product to sell on the black market on the street with the building being so saturated and soggy. It’s the ceiling is literally sweating leaking water droplets.😂😂😂😂😂😂
I’m confused because tropical countries like mine (I live in Malaysia), humidity normally reaches 80-90%. Is this not common in countries with 4 seasons?
no, they are weak against humidity. the japanese claims that no other country can compare to their humidity in the summer. truth is it's only 70-80%. sure higher than most temperate country but a childs play for tropical country.
I live in SG but the kind of humidity in Southern China (I'm from HK) is not the same. It's humid in SG but the humidity doesn't stay the same all day, and as soon as the sun is out, it quickly dries up the rain and puddles (which has been an everyday thing currently 🤮), but still, it dries up pretty quickly. It's not the same kind of humidity in Hong Kong, when it's humid during spring time in HK, the moisture stays and lingers, for days, when that happens, your walls cry and weep all day long, for days.
I would literally die within a few hours. Cos I am from the extremely cold and dry country and humidity mostly stays at 0%. I visisted a few tropical countries during their most dry seasons and my skin was basically falling off.
and i would die if the humidity reaches near 0%. went to a temperate country, at that time humidity was 50%. my lips were cracking and bleeding while my skins was worse than mummy's skin.
I can air dry immediately if I go there 😂 my skin gets tight, finger and lips cracked, nose crusty and what was my humidity…. Like just above 50% 😅 it was dry af compare to our +80% average.
@@supremebuffalo6322 With the right construction methods you can regulate interior humidity different from outside, even passively... Moisture barriers etc... If this is a seasonal thing here, houses should've been built for it... Also the fact that the humidity condensates like this, is also an indication something more is going on besides the 100% humidity...
Thats called poor construction and zero air conditioning. Ive been to north texas, florida, Louisiana... All near 100% humidity constantly, even NJ had it once before.
Do these buildings don’t have ventilation? This is really bad just think of the interior of the building there are probably going to be mold and it can be deadly.
I mean like everywhere around it is wet so no matter how much ventilation you have it will be very wet. But I do agree these are the extreme case they show here.
I think that's what's happening in many of these images. Adjacent rooms have air con on and it's cooling the walls / roof down below the dew point. It's causing the condensation.
Eventually bad for organic materials like used in wood-framed construction, and will lead to slow water damage with mold, but doesn't really affect concrete/steel construction beyond promoting mold. That said, this is a result of improper construction, lack of air conditioning, and other flaws as this literally isn't even possible without design/constructions defects.
@@Demoralized88 Wouldn't air conditioning make it worse? It will create more cold surfaces that will cool down moist air, so that air will not be able to hold that much water. I think the only way to avoid this is to completely isolate a room and dehumidify all incoming air.
@@CosineglProper working AC for a given envelope (indoor space, basically) makes condensation like this impossible. AC is a dehumidifier by design as much if not more than just cooling the air. The AC Evap Coil inside a furnace or air handler in Central air greatly lower humidity by the water condensing on it, and falling into the drip pan where drains out of the house. By circulating the air throughout the house, it's able to dehumidify the whole building. Put simply, this isn't possible with properly installed AC, because it's intended to prevent scenarios exactly like this. Your assumption would be correct if AC didn't also dehumidify and only lowered temps, but I and many people seem to not know that AC also dehumidifies by default unless broken. Additional indoor dehumidifiers work the exact same way to condense ambient water through a cold radiator and are only different in that they don't also cool. Last thing, AC removes so much moisture that there's very little relative to humid air outdoors and, for anywhere near the same condensation on surfaces, they would need to be much colder. The kind of water in the air needed for a video like this would 100% need to be very warm and very high relative humidity, which makes me positive it's completely unconditioned and probably open to the outdoors. There's a huge difference in water capacity vs hot outdoor air and cooler indoor air at the same relative humidity (which makes it confusing) and will require far less colder surfaces to condense as you seem to know.
There is too much moisture in the air which condensate on almost every surface and it cannot evaporate with a humidity level of 100. Airflow is not gonna change that. It's also dangerous for people because sweat will not evaporate so it's very easy to overheat.
@@thedistinguished5255 when framing (walls frames in a house 🏠) it’s like plastic ,you staple it to the frames ,it’s stops moisture entering it also protects the timber… very time consuming also flashing and lots of silicone in the roofing sheets..
@@Goofydownrange In Europe and Asia most buildings are made of concrete and bricks, not timber. Even if it was, then you would put a layer on the inside to block moisture getting into the construction, moisture that is created from the inside by people, showers etc. And you put an open layer on the outside to let moisture escape in case there will be any build-up inside the construction. Anyways, it's just not relevant to this situation. The air has a 100% humidity rate, it's just gonna condensate on any surface.
so humid, you start growing fungi, mold and mushrooms on you
That's how the zombie apocalypse starts.
mushrooms grow in my armpit
infinite food supply 😶@@FloridaMan69.
That's how eczema starts...
I actually have fungi on my skin in multiple places
the amount of damages must be insane!!!
People don't really cares much about water damage like this in Guangdong much, at least to my experience. The wall will get wet every year and it is a natural occurrence. But it sure make life a bit difficult when it is raining inside or some wall paint falling on you, making everything covers in white dust.
Most of the damages at home can be avoided by shutting all doors and windows to the outside world all day.
Correct, and despite all of it being preventable by creating quality housing, China has a "never fix it" mentality so they just keep tearing stuff down and replacing it with new tofu buildings.
@@Valkyrie_Yukikazein the video it said it's the worst it's been in 2 decades. so it isn't a "normal occurence" as you say.
@@st20332 Yeah, this year is pretty bad but what I mean is that there are going to be moist/water damage on wall and molds every year. So people are used to those kinds of things so it isn't really like a "huge damage". That's the point. Things will get wet and moldy, even when things aren't as bad as this year's.
Nah how can you breath it’s like a greenhouse
as a florida native, I felt the same way when i went to live in the desert for a short time. It felt like the air was so thin because there was almost zero humidity, i wondered how people could breathe normally.
@@Speedj2Maybe because I grew up in the desert West Coast, but I'd prefer the dry air to whatever this video was.
They already breathe smog.
From sc when i moved to the desert i absolutely could not sleep or breathe right without a humidifier @Speedj2
@@MrBlack-vd2ws The pollution in Southern China is not as bad as it is in some of the Northern cities. Most Southern cities have pretty clean air. You can look at a pollution map of China and see that this is the case. These cities usually have AQI of around 20-50 year round and can be lower than some of the suburbs in the US. Its not like these places are rural farmlands either. Yes it is pretty bad in Northern China, but don't just generalize such a big country.
So humid that you can just take a deep breath when you're thirsty.
Your lungs aren't supposed to have water in them lol
@@YFZriderdude15breath with mouth!
😂
@@hdldm7970 still it will go to lungs lol 😂
@@YFZriderdude15your lungs breathe out water. They're kind of used to it. as long as you don't get too much in it.
As someone from SETX, the best part is when you're trying to drive at night in 100% humidity, and the windshield fogs up so bad, you literally cant see your own hood. You have to put AC on full blast + recirculate to dry out the interior, and if its cold outside, you suffer. Same with houses too.
Yeah. I’m from Northeast Texas and the humidity here hovers from 70-90% normally. It’s 97% humidity right now, but thankfully it’s somewhat cool outside. I know for a fact I’ve seen it that high during the summer though lol, it was terrible.
I hate the weather here in Houston..
@@barebones2001it was pouring in Houston and flooded just now.
I hate when we enter the spring. The constant mowing because the grass is ALWAYS dewy if not sprinkled on and the +90% humidity multiplied by mosquitos and I just talked myself into paying for lawn care this year.
You know you can get the same effect, running the AC plus recirculate, with the temperature set for warm air? No need to make yourself suffer blowing cold air.
Okay, the red paint coming off the LNY decors were seriously creepy.
No it’s hilarious
No it's creepy
No it's noxious
the walls are bleeding
The walls are breathing
Meanwhile, here in Northern China, we're still experiencing the worst winter in a decade even though it's already officially spring.
@@dinglebarry8801 😮💨
@@dinglebarry8801lmao. Seems like you should calm up.
@@treflips2158you’re right. I didn’t read they were in China. Assumed they lived on the same continent as me. Carry on.
A village around Harbin hardly has snow left on the ground... ????
Mandate from heaven?
30 °C at 100% humidity is a wet-bulb temperature. Anyone who is out of AC or stuck outside for more than a few hours will die... and it's only March.
Even using fan or water mist is basically suicide at that condition
Have you seen The Dimming documentary?
where i live, 30+ °C at 80% humidity is a daily things. you won't die.
What do you do to even prevent injury in something like this? seems like only thing you can/should do is just lay down and be as still as possible to not generate sweat, and find a way to remove moisture as much as you can.
30 degrees at 100% humidity is tough but not deadly yet.
Over 37 degrees at 100% humidity is. Because your sweat cannot evaporate basically and you cannot regulate your body temperature anymore leading to overheating.
Whoever makes dehumidifiers has to be quite happy atm
and ACs
@@samueladitya1729 Oh ya, AC sorta do the same thing
Would they even work in those conditions?
@@Kalenz1234 if they are powerful enough.
@@XtremcookieHeat-pumps too
As someone who hates even the smallest bit of humidity this sounds absolutely insane. It would be torture!!!!😮😮😮😮😮😮😮
Bro likes cracked lips
I live in Shenzhen and I easily avoided this humidity vapor issue by simply shutting all the windows and turn on the AC to dehydrate the house and kept everything dry. It’s pretty much common knowledge for locals.
About to say, these houses would also be built with climate in mind right?
Cost is a major I assume. Running the AC like would be expensive.
@@dantruong2582it's not the AC, it's the expensive insulation that prevents humidity from getting in in the first place
Look at this guys secret technique of using AC
you can run most modern a/c in dehydration mode only @@dantruong2582
The guy using hairdryer to remove moist from ceiling 😅😅
What an idiot
Dangerous.
@@NorthernChimp and useless, he is evaporateing the water to condense again :)))
@@funnydawgshorts or he's the using the cool air to push to water in one way instead of sweeping it
@@SadAss. it would take to much time with that mini blower :))
I've lived in Brazil my whole life and I've never seen anything like this, not even in the city of Manaus, in the heart of the Amazon, a humidity level of 100% was recorded.
It happens when it is cold at 10c and the next day is 30c
Relative humidity is a different measurement than simple humidity. It takes dew point into account
Rainforest prevents this from happening perhaps, @@ReineDeLaSeine14. China is almost zero trees, but BR is full of it everywhere
@@matheusb.r.461 There are trees in cities and forests around them in China, mostly in the southeast and the northeast. The north and west have deserts, yet their government has different plans or they had already made them to reforest or turn deserts into forests. People is also motivated or even paid to plant trees. There are other projects already made or planned for building what's called Vertical Forests, building apartments with trees on the sides of every floor.
There's actual governmental support with funds and support for these green projects, while in other parts, it's only buzz to get support.
@@matheusb.r.461是的,中國的氧氣都是進口的,因為沒有樹木,中國需要進口氧氣供老百姓呼吸😂
The real shocker is the dye running down the walls.
So if that decoration ever found itself in the gutter or trash can, or landfill too I guess, the red ink would mossy along to drain somewhere else.
"if"
@@palatialslumlord4938 "when"
@@palatialslumlord4938it will. It's a matter of time.
I've experienced 100% air humidity in the Netherlands, during an extremely hot spring (something that is becoming increasingly prevalent), and it felt *awful* because no amount of sweating helped with temperature regulation, and water from the cold tap came out *lukewarm* but we were fortunate that our houses were insulated enough to not get water condensing on the ceilings! Unfortunately... Dutch homes, or even most European homes beyond the Mediterranean tend to not have any AC installed by default. The Netherlands used to have much colder winters, so our insulation philosophy is to keep warmth IN.
I guess that there is much to come for European people. We could face also more of those crazy weather events.
sleeping with an umbrella is crazy
and the bed is wet for sure.
snowflake
And condensation is also forming on the underside of the umbrella. 🤭
It's as if you're homeless while indoors.
It would be impossible to sleep... How horrible.
Living in a tropical country, humidity is always there and it just make things hotter like a natural sauna.
Though the bright side is that your skin isn't going to dry that easily but still drink water because you will be sweating.
Not, it's not like a natural sauna. A sauna generates dry heat. I'd say it's more like a steam room.
@@paulparomasauna can do both dry and wet heat
Read Wikipedia
@@TheRanguna I don't need to read Wikipedia. I have my own sauna. Dry heat is what true sauna is all about. The humidity rarely reaches 50%. Turkish bath is wet, on the other hand.
Yeah, but as Indonesian, I never experienced this kind of extreme humidity.
It keeps you(r skin) younger...😊
I was not well informed to have a dehumidifier many years back, and our walls would get damp and grow mould. Now we have one in the living room and one in each bedroom. It sure makes a big difference. And it sure helps with the AC as well.
do you mean you were well-informed and not?
They said not, so....? What is your question again? @@kismetau
@@lsrain if they weren't well-informed why did they then say it made a big difference to them? I'm confused.
@@kismetauthey said they weren't well informed, and they had mould. (In the past)
_NOW_ , they have de humidifiers . They learnt from that experience and are more informed now.
@@kismetau English isn't their native language, so I took it to mean they didn't know about dehumidifiers and how they could help. They now know about them and are using them to reduce the humidity indoor. While I could be wrong that is my interpretation of what they said.
One thing to note is that water from a dehumidify is clean and can be used for drinking.
Kärcher window vacuum and a dehumidifier would be your best friends in this situation
Where I live, we have stretches in the summer of 40+ days of between 38°C and 46°C at 54% to 60% humidity. But I’ve never seen water dripping off the ceiling 😬.
Yep that tiny blow dryer is definitely helping
don't worry it's a Dyson 😂
@@kismetau It's not a Dyson, it's a Chinese bootleg
@@davec8153 I have the same one at home. It’s a dehumidifier, vacuum and hair dryer in one 😂🤣
@@davec8153oh probably works better then 😂
Chinas education system is 3rd world, what do you expect?
What horror is this? How can someone without AC survive 100% humidity weather.
People from Third World Countries:
First time?
Never imagined it. Even me as a 3rd worlder, humidity stays at 60% to 70% at most.
Stuffs that placed on your concrete floors starts to get moist and that's it. At night, concrete houses starts to cool-off. Not to mention, we only have electric fans and ceiling fans to tide through the intense heat.
This is insane 😅, it’s like it rained in the building 😮. All the books are wet, you can’t have P.E class at school. This is hard😢, but now the bad weather is gone were I live😊
where i live, 30+ °C at 80% humidity is a daily things.
lol countries in south east asia literally continue to drink hot coffee or tea depending on the country during extremely hot and humid seasons
When I lived in Hong Kong, in spring, I'd come home to a puddle on the floor as if someone dumped a pail of water!
So true! At school it was like it rain inside! 😂
how did you fight the mold?
@@StanleySuperXYou clean surfaces regularly, inside and out
No popcorn ceilings, flat surfaces only
Rugs get washed
It's honestly not that difficult really, just once every few weeks
Wow, that’s worse than what it was in Zhuhai a few weeks ago, when water was covering all the floors of our university. However, that is not uncommon for March. Not every year, but it happens around this time some years.
This is just the average summer day in Florida
Molds will have a field day with this kind of humidity 🍄🍄
Free real estate
Covid-24 now in production, expected release late autumn.
Asia smells of mould
Most mold is harmless
@@BizzeeBmore like black death 2.0
Idk for other east/southeast Asian households, but we always use the dehumidifier during spring just to combat this kind of weather. It’s especially nice if you have a small apartment since a small dehumidifier is sufficient (I live in Hong Kong so most of us live in small apartments)
I don't know about other SEA countries, but here in *most* part of my country Indonesia (part of SEA nations), i said most because our country is too big to say everything the same
We don't have that thing, "dehumidifier" thingy, we just live like usual, probably because of our country is under the Equator Line
We don't have other season except Dry and Wet (like Rain), since its a Tropical country, so we don't have winter, spring, summer, autumn etc seasons in here
But some part of our country has a cold temperature, but it doesn't have any bad news like people died of cold, unless you got caught up on Hypothermia especially on a mountain but that's very rare
About the Humid, in here its more like dry than humid, sometimes only foggy, but its because of pollution back then is really bad, but now? Not so much, because we tried to reduce the amount of pollution
So i don't know about other SEA countries, wether they have the same problem as yours or the same things goes just like ours 👍
Im certain they are doing this too there.
But its way more then their dehumidifying systems can handle.
Dont underestimate how freaking much water air can store.
I wish i was in Hong Kong
动态网自由门 天安門 天安门 法輪功 李洪志 Free Tibet 六四天安門事件 The Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 天安門大屠殺 The Tiananmen Square Massacre 反右派鬥爭 The Anti-Rightist Struggle 大躍進政策 The Great Leap Forward 文化大革命 The Great Proletarian Cultural Revolution 人權 Human Rights 民運 Democratization 自由 Freedom 獨立 Independence 多黨制 Multi-party system 台灣 臺灣 Taiwan Formosa 中華民國 Republic of China 西藏 土伯特 唐古特 Tibet 達賴喇嘛 Dalai Lama 法輪功 Falun Dafa 新疆維吾爾自治區 The Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region 諾貝爾和平獎 Nobel Peace Prize 劉暁波 Liu Xiaobo 民主 言論 思想 反共 反革命 抗議 運動 騷亂 暴亂 騷擾 擾亂 抗暴 平反 維權 示威游行 李洪志 法輪大法 大法弟子 強制斷種 強制堕胎 民族淨化 人體實驗 肅清 胡耀邦 趙紫陽 魏京生 王丹 還政於民 和平演變 激流中國 北京之春 大紀元時報 九評論共産黨 獨裁 專制 壓制 統一 監視 鎮壓 迫害 侵略 掠奪 破壞 拷問 屠殺 活摘器官 誘拐 買賣人口 遊進 走私 毒品 賣淫 春畫 賭博 六合彩 天安門 天安门 法輪功 李洪志 Winnie the Pooh 劉曉波动态网自由门
@@kurohanamaiki5344 sampeyan tinggal buka aja Google, cari aja cuaca, muncul kok kelembapan nya brp. Indonesia tingkat kelembabannya pasti tinggi karena negara tropis dan di dekat laut. Misal sama-sama 28 derajat, kelembapan 90% pasti rasanya lebih panas dibanding kelembaban 60%. Makanya di pegunungan, kl abis hujan dan lembab justru tidak berasa begitu dingin dibanding cuaca cerah (ketika suhunya sama).
回南天 (hui nan tian) is an annual occurence in Guangzhou where I live. The humidity has been insane, but fortunately, the temperature hasn't been too hot. Soon the temperature is going to rise quite a bit and combined with the humidity, it creates very hot and stuffy weather.
Imagine how much mould and mildew spread from this! I hope the damage was repaired quickly.
I live in a place where the annual high average is 90% humidity and temperatures can get much higher than 30c. Arguably- this is only March, but it goes to show how infrastructurally deprecated China is compared to even poorer areas of other tropical regions such as the Lower American bible belt or some place like Florida.
This isn't normal weather, buildings aren't designed for conditions you don't expect.
It's like saying it's poor infrastructure if your florida house is damaged by extreme cold, it isn't something the building is designed for
@@xaiano794 except these areas of china do routinely see this weather- only later in the year. These areas of china have their hot wet seasons it just isn't usually in march. But that means the buildings should be built for it. Also, our homes in the south can withstand freezing temps, but our power infrastructure doesn't like snow much arguably. Enjoy your social credit score for defending tofu dreg
@andrewgill1332 stop how come it hasn't been in the media if, as you claim, its normal for these conditions to occur just later in the year?
And total BS, my friend works as a plumber and if severe freezing temperatures ever hit florida, 90% of the pipes would burst.
Wow 😮
Even living in tropical country amidst 32°C and ~80% humidity without AC and humidifier, I haven't seen something like this (except if there's a leaky roof under a stormy weather but you could just fix the structure and it's gone).
Couldn't imagine the struggle in living their daily life.
Bad roof quality
@Ducky_Yum_Yum wouldn't it rain?
@@Ducky_Yum_Yum If you live in the tropics, 100% humidity happens a lot. You really only see condensation when it's raining. But it's not this bad. Maybe there are other factors why they experienced extreme condensation.
@@Xynic48they say it went up to 30°C, I think there was already 100% humidity or close to it before cooling down. Would be a lot worse than if it was just 100% humidity on a normal day.
Sounds like SEA (SG)
1:04 without context, that part is very scary
are you new to internet
Red ink
Can I introduce to you analyzing blood scatter patterns?
It's actually quite interesting.
You got scared by blood. Are u 9 year old?
@@albinoasesino
> Claims to know a lot about blood splatter
> Doesn't know what it's actually called
bro the amount of fungus would be crazy
So who’s going to explain the gentleman with the blowdryer what happens to the water he evaporates.
I can’t believe how much I complain about the humidity in Florida.
The world is not ready for 101% humidity 😳
you mean 100% right? there can’t be more than 100% humidity, 100% humidity means the air cannot hold any more vapor. it is the saturation point and is a hard line. :) there is absolute humidity, which can go past 100%, but it is used in baking and is not relevant..
That's a joke
this kind of condensation only happens in tofu dreg buildings, with proper insulation this wont happen
more than 100% humidity means rooms are flooding
@@coyotemars5130🤓
1:29 welcome to the future 🙃
Please watch The Dimming documentary. None of this nonsense is normal or natural and the govt is lying about everything.
I hate smart homes 😩
This is why an nfc card exist
Yeah, it wasn't the humidity, his social credit score just went too low.
LOL just wipe it with your shirt.
Just like you wipe your wet fingers to unlock your phone.
The potato chips sogging killed me😂😂😂😂😂👁️👄👁️👍
And people say climate change isn’t an issue
Id have to buy 20 dehumidifiers lol 😂
Reading the comments I'm surprised how many people have never heard of fog.
It doesnt happen much these days
In my lifetime, i only experience haze, but fog? Very rare
@@AnimaRandomYou realize that different locations have different climates/weather, right?
Fog? Can I get the definition please?
Fog? Can I get the origin?
Fog? Can I get it in a sentence?
Fog?
F
I
G
Fog!
Inside the house?
@@AnimaRandomthen you don’t live in central Europe.
In spring and fall/autumn it’s foggy at least once a week over here.
Sometimes so much that you can’t even see things that are 5 meters away.
It's kinda weird to be honest,I live in a country where it's almost 32c 80% humidity where the air feels incredibly warm and sticky and suffocating even when u just took a bathe 5 mins ago but I have never witnessed condensation form on the surface like that in my life....unless it's cold and if it's cold inside like air conditioned place it wouldn't form like that either.....condensation forms on the outside, the only situation that droplets can form like that is if there is no air flow, and ur taking a hot steamy shower or it's a gd sauna or something.....
But the whole thing boggles my mind.....first of all wood or concrete surfaces don't sweat or form condensation like that,and if it's that warm and humid out there,stay in ur concrete apartment room and shut the windows and make sure ur windows are dark and tinted or draw the curtains from morning till night,it will keep the hot humid air out and trust me ur room will be much more comfortably cooler and dark than outside.
At night wait till it's like 11pm or 12 midnight when it's finally somewhat "cooler" then open the windows.....at 8pm the air still feels like a sauna outside.....
Or just get a air con or air dehumidifier,I dunno what these folks are doing.
The only reason it forms droplets like that my guess is these guys are in some wacky place In the desert in china or something,where at night the temperature falls by 10c at night and is extremely cold and it "rains" indoors. Otherwise keep the windows shut all day and stay indoors u will be fine.
At 100% humidity the slightest temperature difference (the inside being cooler than the outside) will lead to condensation forming, due to the inability of the air to hold water.
I think you hit the nail on the head with "no airflow". many of china's cities are overcrowded and poorly constructed and they probably lack the building codes to ensure that the buildings are properly ventilated.
@@Speedj2ohh thanks for bejng jnformative this helped 🙏
this kind of condensation only happens in tofu dreg buildings, with proper insulation this wont happen
It's not weird because a hundred is a different number than eighty
Major sweating without moving. I’ve been in south Korea doing an installation and felt the wrath of their humidity. But I was mostly in a temp controlled clean room. I also experienced their rain storms where each drop was like a cup of water
When youre air seeding and "eh a little more won hurt"
soooo, what happened to their PCs and other exposed electronics?
What people have to understand is humidity is relative. I also live in a place where the relative humidity is high, but the temperature is low. 100% humidity at 30C is lot more water in the air than 100% humidity at 5C. 100% humidity at 5C is actually super dry.
What is happening here is the inside the house is slightly cooler than outside. Someone opens the windows or balcony doors, hot humid air rushes in. The slight drop in temperature squeezes all the water out. Hot air can hold more moisture than cold air.
This is a great answer, people forget that it's RELATIVE humidity. and that yes hot air can hold a lot more water in it than cold. So 100% humidity (air can't hold any more water) at high temps, that's a lot more water being released on everything and tiny temperature changes can make for big bad results. Close all the windows and buy a dehumidifier.
Yes it's like Vancouver which gets tons of rain from fall all the way through winter, but our humidity is super low. And in the summer it gets quite hot but it's super dry, so humidity is also low. It's just a low humidity place all around. In fact if you like rain and not overly hot summers the weather is just about perfect
@@d-rockanomaly9243 No, you are also missing the point...
That is scary humid
amogus
You back
100% humidity is actually quite common.
nothing's better than a traditional key
you try gripping a key with wet hands and a wet key
@@bloodakoos +rusted locks
Rusted locks...
@@matthewpauls2498a corroded circuit board is so much better.
@@bloodakoos it still works though. Unlike fingerprint locks, which just cease to function entirely
Imagine what can happen to tofu dreg buildings if they were subject to such high humidity?
We get this kind of humidity in the southeast of the US all the time. We have air conditioners so it's not humid inside and water doesn't condense on every ceiling and wall. This is humidity + no AC and leaving the windows open.
Nah, in the southeast US many new suburban homes built after 2005 would be badly affected
@@circleinforthecube5170Me in Miami in a home built in 98 with no issues of humidity at all: "huh-"
@@circleinforthecube5170you’ve never lived there have you…/
I’m confused, there are other places in the world with 100% relative humidity as well but without the insane amount of water everywhere. Is there a reason for that in particular?
Im not sure but its probably because of rapid changing temperature, from cold and sudden warming may cause this. Where i live, 100% humidity can occur but because its always warm,so it never becomes like this. I guess this is why it occurs more in places where its like the tropics but still get quite cold weather like northern vietnam/ south China.
Yeah, it has to be temperature changes. The air temperature rises, but the buildings take time to warm from the sun. So when saturated air comes into contact with cold walls and ceilings, it condenses.
@@lysandersensale2792 hahah yes this must be it, after typing this comment i took a while to recall what i learnt in science lessons back in school 😭
It only rains when humidity hits 100%. Same with fog and mist and snow. The captioning on the video makes no sense.
It is also relative humidity, not absolute. Warm air can hold more water than cold air. So 100% humidity at 35C will have a lot more water in the air than 100% humidity at 5C so there will naturally be more condensation forming.
I've only experienced this once when I visited Guangzhou maybe back in early 2000s. I think it was around March or April when I visited. Water was dripping from the ceiling and have to be careful walking due to wet marble floors all over the place. Quite interesting being from LA lol
yeah so the 20 years data checks out lol. 2004 i guess?
I have seen this phenomenon quite often in March but not as serious as this. I remember my parents called it '' return to South '' 回南.
China is a very humid country. You think the 1.4 billion people living there would know that.
imagine the mold resulting from that. Here in the states, we are used to high humidity in many areas, and build our structures to prevent this.
That's why A/C is a must in places like that. And fingerprint locks is a very dumb idea.
it's not dumb, it's modern. guess your country hasn't got them yet huh.
@@roku_nine I mean, do they work in these conditions? No? Then it is pretty dumb.
@@roku_nine many things are modern and dumb at the same time
Anything that relies purely on electricity to work, is a dumb idea. What if CME hits the earth and the power grid goes down? Your electric cars and fingerprint locks will stop working, you won't even be able to get inside your own home.
It's dumb.
Humidity is magnet for mold indoors. Both on food but also furniture and walls/celling.
Dehumidifer is needed 24/7 in this situation in all rooms.
Da heck? 95% humidity is like a daily normal in my country but no where i have seen water droplets just appearing on walls like that. Is 5% that big a difference lol
warm & humid indoor coupled with cold outdoor. temperature difference
@@roku_nine how does the indoor humidity look like a burst pipe ha djust happend while the outside is cold? Im unable to grasp the logic. Even if its true…wouldn’t opening the window fix or atleast negate the level of humidity?
@@mobgaming1271 try leaving your refrigerator door open just a little and see what happen tomorrow. opening the window should help .i guess people in the video didn't open them. 🤷
air holds much more water vapor at higher temperature
Not common everywhere. It needs a change in temperature (either the AC or the outside)
Maybe they have air conditioning, so there walls are cold, but they had a window or door open or a leak in the AC. So the humidity from the hot outside got in and quickly cooled and condensed when it touched a cold wall.
Or they had the AC shut off (more water held in hot air) and they later turned it on for the night (the water had to condense now that the air is cold)
Works exactly like morning dew you’d see outdoors or on foggy days or your shower mirror
This is why you need air flow.
E:We need to safe energy!
C: let me dry my ceiling with an hairdryer
I lived in rural Alabama for a year..we had 100% humidity often. My house never looked like this inside> Sure we had AC but there were areas it didn't reach like the garage and the bathroom.
You cannot have relative humidity beyond 100%, it's called dew point where the water must then condensate into dew. Probably the absolute humidity in your case was never very high to begin with. In the Chinese case the wind coming in from the seas at higher temperature (that can carry more humidity) settles into a place with the temperature drops significantly (like from 30 to 10), condensating the water molecules very quickly.
agree to disagree...@@RiantoFatma
@@RiantoFatma He didn't say above 100%. And as someone who lived in Alabama, yes it very often hits 90% and above in the Summer, and hits 100% multiple times a year. Swamplands are humid.
i wonder how affective a dehumidifer would be in a room under these conditions
Full container in less than 10 seconds💀
Very. The wetter and warmer it is, the more efficient they are. Of course, you must consider how well sealed an airspace is...
@KitKitChanIsaac just run a pipe outside and seal the hole
Mold is going to be a real health issue in those houses
Ever heard of a dehumidifier? **laughs in Bug from Uncle Buck**
Of course, I live in Florida.
Wow that's something never seen before
It's #Usual For Them
短时间内同时受到冷空气和热带海洋潮湿空气交互作用的地区才会有这种现象 建筑物温度太低 但空气却温暖潮湿 就像你在佛罗里达或马来西亚打开冰箱时所发生的凝结现象
it's a annual thing for them at guangdong😂cause of the sudden shift of temp from cold to hot in a short time period. basically what happens when you took out a can of coke from fridge, and u'll see it happen in front of you, but this at much larger scale
that's why dry mode exists with air conditioning
not all people have ACs
I think the problem is in large part due to no or very little insulation. 100% relative humidity is not that big a deal. Ask anyone in south Louisiana or in Oregon.
Those who say “ oh summer is my favourite season ” haven’t actually experienced true summer 😂
Working around powerplants must be super dangerous in those conditions . & fungus & mold
It's called a dehumidifier.
for this kind of humidity, you need atleast a couple of dehumidifiers (which most families in Hong Kong have at home), and couple of ACs on at the same time, this is extreme humidity 😂
@@JL_hahaha0303 I am from North Carolina, US where it’s 32-37 all Summer with many days being 100% humidity (yes, daysss in a row) and we have central air conditioning through the whole house and it never gets wet inside. 😂 We also never use dehumidifiers. Also, to each person who keeps doubting me, come live where I live and you’ll see. 😌
@@park.jasmin333I doubt that 100% you are claiming, if it truly was 100% humidity you wouldn't be able to see anything beyond 300 meters. And every car would need to have wind shield wipers activated whilst driving on a hot summer day to prevent condensation on their windshield. People would be covered in damp moisture to their underwear within hours. I'm guessing it's near the 90-95 mark.
@@average391 Hmmm so I guess I misread the temperature and humidity for 10 years straight? I guess the weatherman was also wrong and you are right. 😁👍
@@park.jasmin333 you could just confirm if you cannot see beyond 300m outside or if it was covered with a dense fog
The pack of soggy lays chips brought back memories of when I was in school standing in the rain waiting for the bus 😩
So the humidity is also causing electricity to leak from switches and other power sources too 😮
Why not use an air-conditioner? Or at least a dehumidifier? It would get the moisture out right away
I don’t feel sorry for drug dealers going through this humidity moisture renewing their product to sell on the black market on the street with the building being so saturated and soggy. It’s the ceiling is literally sweating leaking water droplets.😂😂😂😂😂😂
I’m confused because tropical countries like mine (I live in Malaysia), humidity normally reaches 80-90%. Is this not common in countries with 4 seasons?
Usually in countries with 4 seasons only hot and dry
we get 100% humidity in Germany but its at 2C so basically not an issue in door
no, they are weak against humidity. the japanese claims that no other country can compare to their humidity in the summer. truth is it's only 70-80%. sure higher than most temperate country but a childs play for tropical country.
@@roku_ninethat is much better than in where I live. It's usually 30° with 85% humidity all the time ( at least this afternoon)
I live in SG but the kind of humidity in Southern China (I'm from HK) is not the same. It's humid in SG but the humidity doesn't stay the same all day, and as soon as the sun is out, it quickly dries up the rain and puddles (which has been an everyday thing currently 🤮), but still, it dries up pretty quickly. It's not the same kind of humidity in Hong Kong, when it's humid during spring time in HK, the moisture stays and lingers, for days, when that happens, your walls cry and weep all day long, for days.
Bro was out there with a snub nose hair dryer☠️☠️😂😂
That is a problem caused by the faulty development... All you need is right air circulation in a house or apartment...
bro the melting decorations look like blood
Strange how where i live in Australia is nearly 100% humidity every day and the only time i see this is on walls that are cold from air-conditioning
I would literally die within a few hours. Cos I am from the extremely cold and dry country and humidity mostly stays at 0%. I visisted a few tropical countries during their most dry seasons and my skin was basically falling off.
and i would die if the humidity reaches near 0%. went to a temperate country, at that time humidity was 50%. my lips were cracking and bleeding while my skins was worse than mummy's skin.
You must ban and avoid Sg at all costs 😂
I can air dry immediately if I go there 😂 my skin gets tight, finger and lips cracked, nose crusty and what was my humidity…. Like just above 50% 😅 it was dry af compare to our +80% average.
@@TheOldmankknot just Singapore
Thailand , Vietnam, Indonesia etc
@@TheOldmankkfun fact Bangkok is hotter than Singapore
I live in Florida. We have 80% humidity all year. 100% in the summer. But we have air conditioning. Big difference.
No 100% humidity is in cold conditions. The hotter it is the humidity drops. More like 10/20% in Florida.
WRONG
We do not have 100% humidity smh
@@emjay313Do you live on the gulf coast? I'm near Tampa, we get 100% humidity all the time, especially right before a storm comes through.
@@neilgodfrey2669 da faq? what part of Florida has 20%? i am moving there!!!!
That’s condensation, poor building construction.
In China!? Noooooooooo.😂
That's EVERYTHING in China.
You dont understand what humidity is 😂
@@supremebuffalo6322 enlighten me please. It looks like extreme condensation. Which humidity does play a part in
@@supremebuffalo6322 With the right construction methods you can regulate interior humidity different from outside, even passively... Moisture barriers etc... If this is a seasonal thing here, houses should've been built for it...
Also the fact that the humidity condensates like this, is also an indication something more is going on besides the 100% humidity...
I wish I can sleep under an umbrella-
poor building quality
Thats called poor construction and zero air conditioning. Ive been to north texas, florida, Louisiana... All near 100% humidity constantly, even NJ had it once before.
Do these buildings don’t have ventilation? This is really bad just think of the interior of the building there are probably going to be mold and it can be deadly.
I mean like everywhere around it is wet so no matter how much ventilation you have it will be very wet. But I do agree these are the extreme case they show here.
I think that's what's happening in many of these images. Adjacent rooms have air con on and it's cooling the walls / roof down below the dew point. It's causing the condensation.
unless you make your room as a vacuum environment...or else the air will be so wet that any ventilator will be meaningless...
Sealed Chips went soggy let that sink in
@@Gigachad101-i8g It said unsealed
Question: is it dangerous for buildings? (Concrete, electrical setups, etc)
For Chinese buildings probably.. When you see the "toothpaste concrete" buildings (look it up). Yeah it's probably bad.
Eventually bad for organic materials like used in wood-framed construction, and will lead to slow water damage with mold, but doesn't really affect concrete/steel construction beyond promoting mold. That said, this is a result of improper construction, lack of air conditioning, and other flaws as this literally isn't even possible without design/constructions defects.
@@Demoralized88 Wouldn't air conditioning make it worse? It will create more cold surfaces that will cool down moist air, so that air will not be able to hold that much water.
I think the only way to avoid this is to completely isolate a room and dehumidify all incoming air.
@@CosineglProper working AC for a given envelope (indoor space, basically) makes condensation like this impossible. AC is a dehumidifier by design as much if not more than just cooling the air.
The AC Evap Coil inside a furnace or air handler in Central air greatly lower humidity by the water condensing on it, and falling into the drip pan where drains out of the house. By circulating the air throughout the house, it's able to dehumidify the whole building. Put simply, this isn't possible with properly installed AC, because it's intended to prevent scenarios exactly like this.
Your assumption would be correct if AC didn't also dehumidify and only lowered temps, but I and many people seem to not know that AC also dehumidifies by default unless broken. Additional indoor dehumidifiers work the exact same way to condense ambient water through a cold radiator and are only different in that they don't also cool.
Last thing, AC removes so much moisture that there's very little relative to humid air outdoors and, for anywhere near the same condensation on surfaces, they would need to be much colder. The kind of water in the air needed for a video like this would 100% need to be very warm and very high relative humidity, which makes me positive it's completely unconditioned and probably open to the outdoors. There's a huge difference in water capacity vs hot outdoor air and cooler indoor air at the same relative humidity (which makes it confusing) and will require far less colder surfaces to condense as you seem to know.
@@Cosinegl Air conditioning dehumidifies all air in the room.
this looks like it came directly from a junji ito manga
Why would anyone live there.
Automatic refilling water bottle startups know where to go now.
Talk about needing a dehumidifier!
Mold everywhere in houses now yuck
That just looks so miserable 🥲
I just dont understand how ?!? like there must be no airflow or something, which create condensation
There is too much moisture in the air which condensate on almost every surface and it cannot evaporate with a humidity level of 100. Airflow is not gonna change that. It's also dangerous for people because sweat will not evaporate so it's very easy to overheat.
Oh no my AliExpress order will become soggy.
Great showing of sympathy
Hartz dog
@@purpinknmore capitalist than the united states of homelessness
Such a cheapskate 😂
That means insulation hasn’t been installed properly
You can't prevent this with insulation.
can you explain what you mean? is the moisture supposed to escape through the wall or something?
@@thedistinguished5255 when framing (walls frames in a house 🏠) it’s like plastic ,you staple it to the frames ,it’s stops moisture entering it also protects the timber… very time consuming also flashing and lots of silicone in the roofing sheets..
@@Goofydownrange In Europe and Asia most buildings are made of concrete and bricks, not timber. Even if it was, then you would put a layer on the inside to block moisture getting into the construction, moisture that is created from the inside by people, showers etc. And you put an open layer on the outside to let moisture escape in case there will be any build-up inside the construction.
Anyways, it's just not relevant to this situation. The air has a 100% humidity rate, it's just gonna condensate on any surface.
@@Cr1tical86 ok 👍
you would need more than one dehumidifier
Bro first time seeing something like this.
This is hard for me to comprehend. I always associate heat with dry air.
what about going into the forest on a hot summer day after it rained? that is what it feels like.
@@genericuser456-dm4wiOn my skin that's a heavenly combination but perhaps I'm just used to it
Visit anywhere in south east asia during the rainy season and you'll comprehend it much quicker