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ALERT: FLASH FLOOD WARNING: Oahu in Honolulu, HI — Warning issued April 10 at 4:46PM HST until April 10 at 7:45PM HST by NWS Honolulu HIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Emmet — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Western Chippewa — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Clay, MN — Watch issued April 10 at 9:29PM CDT by NWS Grand Forks NDALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Guam — Watch issued April 11 at 8:05AM ChST until April 15 at 10:00AM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Bayfield — Watch issued April 10 at 1:04PM CDT until April 15 at 7:00AM CDT by NWS Duluth MNFEMA approves major disaster declaration for Tennessee following severe winter storm — Feb. 7, 2026IICRC S520 mold remediation standard cited in 2026 National Defense Authorization Act — Jan. 5, 2026Hawaii receives presidential disaster declaration for flooding — Apr. 8, 2026IICRC S500 consensus body issues position statement on weather-related water damage — Mar. 16, 2026LA wildfire rebuilding: California Insurance Commissioner study shows fire-safe construction cuts losses — Mar. 27, 2026FEMA designates 15 Tennessee counties as natural disaster areas after winter storm — Apr. 6, 2026IICRC S220 standard open for second round of public input — Mar. 27, 2026R&R Magazine: AI adoption reaches 88% of restoration businesses in 2026 — Feb. 18, 2026Commerce Dept. invests $4.9M in disaster supplemental funding for storm-impacted states — Apr. 9, 2026Florida Helene and Milton recovery: FEMA provides ongoing support as long-term recovery continues — Feb. 10, 2026ALERT: FLASH FLOOD WARNING: Oahu in Honolulu, HI — Warning issued April 10 at 4:46PM HST until April 10 at 7:45PM HST by NWS Honolulu HIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Emmet — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Western Chippewa — Watch issued April 10 at 10:31PM EDT until April 15 at 8:00AM EDT by NWS Gaylord MIALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Clay, MN — Watch issued April 10 at 9:29PM CDT by NWS Grand Forks NDALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Guam — Watch issued April 11 at 8:05AM ChST until April 15 at 10:00AM ChST by NWS Tiyan GUALERT: FLOOD WATCH: Bayfield — Watch issued April 10 at 1:04PM CDT until April 15 at 7:00AM CDT by NWS Duluth MNFEMA approves major disaster declaration for Tennessee following severe winter storm — Feb. 7, 2026IICRC S520 mold remediation standard cited in 2026 National Defense Authorization Act — Jan. 5, 2026Hawaii receives presidential disaster declaration for flooding — Apr. 8, 2026IICRC S500 consensus body issues position statement on weather-related water damage — Mar. 16, 2026LA wildfire rebuilding: California Insurance Commissioner study shows fire-safe construction cuts losses — Mar. 27, 2026FEMA designates 15 Tennessee counties as natural disaster areas after winter storm — Apr. 6, 2026IICRC S220 standard open for second round of public input — Mar. 27, 2026R&R Magazine: AI adoption reaches 88% of restoration businesses in 2026 — Feb. 18, 2026Commerce Dept. invests $4.9M in disaster supplemental funding for storm-impacted states — Apr. 9, 2026Florida Helene and Milton recovery: FEMA provides ongoing support as long-term recovery continues — Feb. 10, 2026
LIVE|Saturday, April 11, 2026
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Heat Drying Technology Is Cutting Structural Drying Times by Up to 40 Percent, Contractors Report

Low-grain refrigerant dehumidifiers paired with heat injection systems are transforming how restoration contractors approach large-loss structural drying — reducing job cycle times and improving documentation.

A growing number of restoration contractors are reporting dramatic reductions in structural drying cycle times after adopting heat-assisted drying systems — a technology that pairs low-grain refrigerant (LGR) dehumidifiers with controlled heat injection to accelerate evaporation from wet building materials.

Traditional cold-air drying relies on ambient temperature and dehumidification alone. Heat drying systems raise the temperature of the drying environment to between 90 and 120 degrees Fahrenheit, dramatically increasing the vapor pressure differential that drives moisture out of wood framing, subfloors, and wall cavities.

Contractors using heat drying systems on Category 1 water losses report average drying times of two to three days, compared to four to six days with conventional equipment. On large commercial losses, the time savings translate directly to reduced equipment rental costs, lower labor hours, and faster claim closure.

Documentation has also improved. Modern heat drying systems integrate with psychrometric monitoring software that logs temperature, relative humidity, and dew point at regular intervals, creating a defensible drying record that satisfies both IICRC S500 documentation requirements and insurance carrier audit standards.

The technology is not without limitations. Heat drying requires careful management to avoid damaging heat-sensitive materials such as hardwood flooring, and the systems require adequate electrical service — a constraint on some residential jobs.

Industry analysts expect heat drying adoption to accelerate as insurance carriers increasingly scrutinize drying documentation and demand faster claim closure.

Topics:heat dryingstructural dryingequipmenttechnologyLGR dehumidifier
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