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Drying Equipment

Commercial drying equipment for water damage restoration pairs air movers and dehumidifiers as the two-component system that removes moisture from wet structures: air movers accelerate evaporation from wet surfaces, dehumidifiers extract that vapor before it re-condenses. The IICRC S500 standard specifies minimum equipment quantities and placement protocols for compliant structural drying. Air movers, LGR dehumidifiers, desiccant units, and monitoring equipment for restoration contractors.

Original price $2,653.00 - Original price $2,653.00
Original price
$2,653.00
$2,653.00 - $2,653.00
Current price $2,653.00

Ebac WM80 Whole House Ducted HVAC Dehumidifier – 115V Wall-Mount

Ebac
In stock

Ebac WM80 Dehumidifier HVAC The Ebac WM80 Dehumidifier HVAC is a high-performance, wall-mounted solution designed to efficiently control humidity i...

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Original price $2,653.00 - Original price $2,653.00
Original price
$2,653.00
$2,653.00 - $2,653.00
Current price $2,653.00

Commercial Drying Equipment for Water Damage Restoration

Air Movers and Dehumidifiers: Why Both Are Required for Structural Drying

Structural drying depends on two simultaneous processes working together. Air movers accelerate evaporation by replacing the stagnant, moisture-saturated boundary layer of air sitting against wet materials with drier air from the room interior. This keeps the vapor pressure gradient between the wet surface and the surrounding air steep enough to sustain rapid evaporation. Dehumidifiers then extract that evaporated moisture from the air before it re-condenses on cooler surfaces elsewhere in the structure. Running air movers without dehumidifiers raises room relative humidity until evaporation slows and eventually stalls, turning the drying system into a moisture redistribution system. Running dehumidifiers without air movers leaves stagnant moist air in contact with wet walls and floors, creating a boundary layer that insulates the surface from the drier air above and dramatically slows moisture release. Together, the two components maintain the aggressive psychrometric conditions required to dry structural assemblies within the 3-5 day window that limits secondary mold damage. This two-component approach is the foundation of IICRC S500 structural drying methodology and the basis for all equipment placement decisions on a water loss job site.

Positioning Air Movers to Maximize Evaporation from Walls and Floors

Air mover placement follows the principle of directing high-velocity airflow across wet surfaces at a shallow angle rather than perpendicular to them. Angling a unit at 45 degrees toward a wet wall, positioned 2-4 feet out from the baseboard, creates a circular airflow pattern that pulls moist air away from the wall surface and drives it toward the dehumidifier intake. IICRC S500 placement guidelines call for one air mover per 40-60 linear feet of wet wall on standard losses, with higher density on deeply saturated assemblies. Stacking configurations are used for wet subfloor systems, directing airflow beneath floating floors or through access panels to reach structural cavities where conventional placement cannot reach. On multi-room losses, units are daisy-chained around the perimeter to maintain consistent airflow through connected spaces. Placement documentation, including diagrams showing unit positions and airflow direction, is required for insurance claim reporting and helps restorers optimize placement adjustments as drying progresses and moisture content readings change across the structure.

Related: Air Movers · LGR Dehumidifiers · Desiccant Dehumidifiers · Flood Water Extraction · Air Scrubbers for Water Damage

When to Add a Desiccant Dehumidifier to a Refrigerant-Based Drying System

Refrigerant dehumidifiers, including LGR units, lose efficiency as temperature drops below 55°F and as relative humidity approaches the lower drying range targets. In winter losses, unheated structures, crawl spaces, or cold storage areas, the refrigerant coil cannot condense moisture efficiently at low ambient temperatures. Desiccant dehumidifiers use a silica gel rotor that adsorbs moisture through a chemical process rather than condensation, making them effective in temperatures as low as 32°F and at very low humidity levels. Adding a desiccant unit to a refrigerant-based system lets the LGR handle the high-volume initial moisture load while the desiccant unit pushes final drying through the low-humidity range where the LGR performance curve flattens. This combination is particularly effective for drying dense structural materials, hardwood flooring, and thick concrete slabs that hold residual moisture long after surface readings normalize. The added operating cost of a desiccant unit is typically offset by shortened drying timelines and reduced secondary damage exposure on difficult losses.

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