> In a typical Finnish sauna, the temperature of the air, the room, and the benches are above the dew point even when water is thrown on the hot stones and vaporized. Thus, they remain dry. In contrast, the sauna bathers are at about 60–80 °C (140–176 °F), which is below the dew point, so that water is condensed on the bathers' skin. This process releases heat and makes the steam feel hot.
I mean yes it depends on your definition of humid but if your definition of humid is under 20% RH then that's not in agreement with any other humans on the planet and if it's over 50% RH then no, millions of people are not doing this because they would die. Our bedroom is at 50% RH because under that our baby's skin dries out. There's no way anyone is sitting in a 90 C 50% RH sauna for any appreciable amount of time. They would die.
Haha no, I been in 90c saunas many times. Can I stay there for a long time? Heck no. But some people can and it doesn’t kill you (maybe if you have some preexisting condition)
No, it seems saunas have very low relative humidity except for briefly after you splash the hot rocks. "Relative" is the key term there: the absolute humidity is high, but the hot air can accept much more H20 and it will suck moisture off your body. So it is a dry environment according to humans.
Yeah, I’ve taken hundreds of (Finnish) saunas (both electric and woodfired) and they all have one thing in common: they’re dry. It’s a bit more humid when you throw water on the rocks, but it generally stays between 10-40% RH. This is a good thing, as 90% RH at 90C would be uncomfortable to say the least.