SilverLexus
Super Enthusiast
Just curious. Thanks!


Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
White95Max said:Yes, but why would the temperature inside the car be less than the ambient temperature outside? If you say when the A/C is running, then the humidity in the interior would be lower as well.
Most of the time when people complain about fogging on the interior glass, it's immediately after startup, when the temperature inside the car is equal to the temperature outside, but the water vapor from the person's breath is raising the relative humidity inside the car. If the atmospheric conditions already include high relative humidity levels, it won't take much water vapor to raise the relative humidity inside the car to 100%. Keeping the vents blowing fresh air into the interior will actively work to prevent the humidity from reaching 100%.
There's also the chance of creating localized pockets of 100% humidity inside, by breathing directly on the glass. This can be somewhat prevented by exhaling through your nose, to direct the air downward rather than outward toward the glass by mouth breathing.
chml17l said:I think most are familiar with the original Rain-X antifog treatment and IMO it is crap. Unless they have changed/updated their original formula since I tried it long ago, I believe that's why Lee was asking for a quality alternative.
chml17l said:Paul, I understand where you're coming from and I should have been more specific. I guess I'm just too used to having the following happen in the humid environment of Louisiana. You can also get condensation to form on the *outside* of the windshield by having cold air (ac) blowing on the inside of your windshield. This is the phenomenon that I was trying to describe earlier.
Sorry for the threadjack science/meteorology lesson.![]()
twitch said:I know many people who use the heater inside of the car without using the A/C on. This creates a problem since it makes the interior more humid.
White95Max said:Heating the air makes it LESS humid.
Example:
At 15*C the air can hold 11g of water vapor per kilogram of air.
At 20*C the air can hold 15g of water vapor per kilogram of air.
These are scientific numbers, not just random numbers pulled out of my head.
twitch said:interesting, good to know. I wouldn't take you as a person to pull these numbers outta your head![]()
White95Max said:Anyway, hot air has a higher ability to hold water vapor than cooler air!![]()
SilverLexus said:Getting back to the first post...Does anyone know of a good anti-fog product?
twitch said:Then wouldn't this mean that heating the air would make it MORE humid, not less?
And now that I look at the numbers you posted again it that would make sense due to the higher temperature having the ability to hold more water vapor.