[quote="lindas88"]Thanks for the reply....My device was much lower then the bed....I'm positive I didn't overfill the tank....and the humidity of my house I have no idea....Yesterday was warm and sunny and last night was clear and I had a great night sleep and no water at all in the hose so I think it has to do with the dampness outside. I also forgot to mention that I had a window fan on all night when that happened and last night didn't...that might have helped. I appreciate your reply.[/quote]
Good evening Linda! The temperature both inside and outside of your house can effect the amount of humidity that you receive when on your CPAP. Because most of the CPAP tubing that people receive from their DME's doesn't have a heated wire inside of it, we must create our our warming systems for our tubes. Let me try to explain....
The hot plate on your humidifier is set at a certain temperature. The number that you set your humidifier to is, to my understanding (but I could be wrong), the amount of degrees celsius that you anticipate the temperature to drop between the humidifier base until the humidity reaches your mask. Basically, I had this explained to me when using the fisher and paykel stand alone heaters and integrated ones. They likened it to the meteorologist and his explaination of the dew point.
If the outside temperature is 90 degrees and 100% humidity. The weatherman says that the dew point will occur at 72 degrees. These are just random numbers for all of you weather nuts out there!

When the hot air is full of moisture, if there were any more moisture added, it wouldn't fit and then it would rain. Just like an ice cube, when the temperature cools off the water molecules shrink. If the temperature cools off too quickly, the water in the air doesn't have time to shrink quick enough and some of it doesn't stay vaporized. Hence the dew! I know that is a very random explaination, but it helped me understand it.
So if the temperature of you heated humidifier is always set at the same number, but the temperature of your room varies, you could have potentially more 'rain out' on cooler nights. You could alleviate this several ways. I'm sure others have wonderful suggestions to add, but here are a few. If you knew that it was going to be cooler in your room, you could leave your number at 3, but try keeping just your tubing warmer. That way, the room temperature won't affect the tubing temperature and the amount of humidity that you are used to getting will remain constant. Some people have suggested wrapping a couple of ace bandages around the tubing or sleeping with it under your blankets to pick up your body temperature. Or you could change the number a little if you know that the temperature is going to drop that night.
I hope that this made sense and I hope that it helps!