Pressure was initially setup to 6-20 and the ramp was set to on (starting at 4). I couldn't stand the suffocating air feeling when I would first put the mask on so I disabled the ramp and later when I went over the pressure graphs with the technician we decided to raise my starting pressure to 9 as I usually run at 10 with peaks of 15 to 17. That definitely made wearing the mask easier and I didn't have to worry if I needed to get up during the night that the machine would reset and start out at a too low pressure again.
Now on to my question. I did not like the auto setting for the hose temp. Hose temperature and climate were set to auto. As I understand from the clinician manual, this is 80 degrees F and 80% humidity. That felt too tropical for me, so the tech suggested reducing the temperature. I set the hose temperature to 75 F and left the climate at auto. I understood from the manual that this should guarantee no water in the hose, as long as the setting for climate was set to auto. I thought I had a little water in the corner of my mask the next morning, but I didn't think too much of it. The next night when I took a breath to wake up the machine, it sounded like the hose being drawn over an edge of a counter. I discovered that there was water in the hose causing the noise whenever I took a breath. That surprised me as I thought it should have been impossible to get into that state with the setting set to auto for climate. I removed the hose, drained it by hanging it, and then set the climate to manual. The default that was listed was 4, and I reduced that to 2. I let the machine blow a few good blasts to dry the hose, and there was no more water in it after that. But I did notice, even though I was breathing through my nose all night, that my throat felt dry later in the early morning hours. I'm sure this is because of the lowered humidity setting. This morning I raised the humidity setting to 3 but I have not yet tried it. I'll see what happens tonight.
The bigger question is, how did the ClimateLine hose get water in it when the climate setting was set to automatic and I have the heated hose? I was sure that should be managed automatically so that there could never be more water in the hose air than the air temperature could handle? I can raise the hose temperature again but I am enjoying the cooler air now. My bedroom is air conditioned and I keep it at 70 degrees F, so there isn't a lot of humidity in the air. I know that the humidifier reservoir is clean and I didn't overfill it. I've been using only distilled water as my technician advised me to do.
Can anyone shed any light on what happened and let me know any advice on what I'm trying to do?
Thanks in advance