Just going to throw this out there.....we all usually talk in temperature and relative humidity (i.e 50%). Get yourself a psychrometric chart (simple to find on google, etc...). It plots temperature and relative humidity and gives an absolute humidity. This can be very helpful. You can figure out what relative humidity to run at different temperatures.
For example, 45% realtive humidity is great in a 23-24 C (75-77 F) shop, but the same relative humidity at a higher temperature (say 30 C or 86 F or higher), and 45% humidity is a nightmare for your print units.
It is a small tool to learn to use, but it helps t mold how you think about humidity.
T