THE RIGHT CLIMATE IN YOUR SAUNA
In a sauna, the temperature should heat the human body evenly.
Only with such a sauna can you get true pleasure without harming your health.
A fan that creates a circulating effect for heat and steam quickly fills the sauna with evenly distributed warmth.
Saunas with stagnant air are low in contrast and humid, as the evaporation of sweat (moisture) from the skin leads to a gradual build-up of humidity in the air around the person—just like in an unventilated room.
The presence of airflow makes the sauna more dynamic, capable of delivering intense waves of hot steam and drying quickly.
This means a sauna with moving air can be both a steam sauna (mainly for short periods) and a dry sauna (for longer periods), depending on the spatial distribution of airflow.