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C & E
 
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Default Basement flooding

We're in the East coast heavy rain belt and yesterday morning I vacuumed out
80 gallons - about the worst it has ever been for our home - mush worse for
others. My wife spent the day vac'ing the indoor/outdoor carpet down there
and we have kept fans on as well as the HVAC fan on constantly with the A/C
on. I was disappointed that it wasn't more dry this morning but it'still
raining here. Not a good scenario for drying. Do you think that it would
be any help to turn on the baseboard electric heat down there to try to
alter the relative humidity and get some of the moisture into the air and
circulating throught the A/C system for dehumidification? Just a thought
but probably not a good one. Opinions please.


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professorpaul
 
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Default Basement flooding

I had a basement/rec room flood out some years ago... burst pipe. I
vacuumed up as much as I could, and did turn on the baseboard heaters,
as well as every fan I could lay my hands on. I was more concerned
about mildew than anything else, and wanted to get the moisture out as
quickly as possible. It worked just fine. I had maybe 1" of water on
the floor.

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Banty
 
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Default Basement flooding

In article , C & E says...

We're in the East coast heavy rain belt and yesterday morning I vacuumed out
80 gallons - about the worst it has ever been for our home - mush worse for
others. My wife spent the day vac'ing the indoor/outdoor carpet down there
and we have kept fans on as well as the HVAC fan on constantly with the A/C
on. I was disappointed that it wasn't more dry this morning but it'still
raining here. Not a good scenario for drying. Do you think that it would
be any help to turn on the baseboard electric heat down there to try to
alter the relative humidity and get some of the moisture into the air and
circulating throught the A/C system for dehumidification? Just a thought
but probably not a good one. Opinions please.



BTDT two things:

1. Take the carpet up and get it out of the house. If you don't have a place to
dry it out pretty much immediately (or even if you do, it may be too late), it
will deteriorate and harbor molds even if it's "indoor/outdoor".

2. I know it's a lot of rain lately, but see if you can address why water is
getting into your basement. Don't just write it off as an unusual event; it'll
happen again and your use of the space will be compromised anyway. So, if the
gutters work and the grading of your lot is correct, you should look into adding
drainage either exterior or interior.

Banty


--

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C & E
 
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Default Basement flooding




BTDT two things:

1. Take the carpet up and get it out of the house. If you don't have a
place to
dry it out pretty much immediately (or even if you do, it may be too
late), it
will deteriorate and harbor molds even if it's "indoor/outdoor".

2. I know it's a lot of rain lately, but see if you can address why water
is
getting into your basement. Don't just write it off as an unusual event;
it'll
happen again and your use of the space will be compromised anyway. So,
if the
gutters work and the grading of your lot is correct, you should look into
adding
drainage either exterior or interior.

Banty


The reason for the water, Banty, is that I forgot to clean the gutters this
spring and they
had accumulated a lot of maple seeds. I got it done in the fall but this
one got by me.
I feel pretty stupid about it. I wa considering one of those gutter guard
solutions but the
nationally advertised one priced out that I could pay someone to clean my
gutters twice a
year for the next 30 years. Others just don't look like they would even
work and that's too
expensive to risk a bet. I'll just keep cleaning - if I remember - DOH!!


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Banty
 
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Default Basement flooding

In article , C & E says...




BTDT two things:

1. Take the carpet up and get it out of the house. If you don't have a
place to
dry it out pretty much immediately (or even if you do, it may be too
late), it
will deteriorate and harbor molds even if it's "indoor/outdoor".

2. I know it's a lot of rain lately, but see if you can address why water
is
getting into your basement. Don't just write it off as an unusual event;
it'll
happen again and your use of the space will be compromised anyway. So,
if the
gutters work and the grading of your lot is correct, you should look into
adding
drainage either exterior or interior.

Banty


The reason for the water, Banty, is that I forgot to clean the gutters this
spring and they
had accumulated a lot of maple seeds.


Ah ha - them "helicopters" are worse than fall leaves by far - they ball up and
block everything! BTDT.

I got it done in the fall but this
one got by me.
I feel pretty stupid about it. I wa considering one of those gutter guard
solutions but the
nationally advertised one priced out that I could pay someone to clean my
gutters twice a
year for the next 30 years. Others just don't look like they would even
work and that's too
expensive to risk a bet. I'll just keep cleaning - if I remember - DOH!!



I'd still think of what else could be done - clearly much the roof drainage
went straight down your foundation.


Banty


--



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Default Basement flooding

The cost of doing nothing about clogged gutters is high, carpet mold
and other damage.

Do the gutter guard to prevent a reoccurence, and look into foundation
drains too.

fix this so it cant happen again increases resale value

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Junior Member
 
Location: SoCal
Posts: 12
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by C & E
We're in the East coast heavy rain belt and yesterday morning I vacuumed out
80 gallons - about the worst it has ever been for our home - mush worse for
others. My wife spent the day vac'ing the indoor/outdoor carpet down there
and we have kept fans on as well as the HVAC fan on constantly with the A/C
on. I was disappointed that it wasn't more dry this morning but it'still
raining here. Not a good scenario for drying. Do you think that it would
be any help to turn on the baseboard electric heat down there to try to
alter the relative humidity and get some of the moisture into the air and
circulating throught the A/C system for dehumidification? Just a thought
but probably not a good one. Opinions please.
A bi-product of air conditioning is condensation, which is moisture from the air converted to liquid.

You may want to evaluate the cost of operating your A/C system for the purposes of capturing random humidity verses hiring specialist equipped with appropriate Water Damage Restoration equipment.
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mrsgator88
 
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Default Basement flooding

The reason for the water, Banty, is that I forgot to clean the gutters
this spring and they
had accumulated a lot of maple seeds. I got it done in the fall but this
one got by me.
I feel pretty stupid about it. I wa considering one of those gutter guard
solutions but the
nationally advertised one priced out that I could pay someone to clean my
gutters twice a
year for the next 30 years. Others just don't look like they would even
work and that's too
expensive to risk a bet. I'll just keep cleaning - if I remember - DOH!!


I use plasitc mesh that just slides into place. I have LOTS of trees around
my house, so I have to yank 'em out once or twice a year to clean the little
that gets through. Worth considering...

S


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mrsgator88
 
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Default Basement flooding

"C & E" wrote in message
news
We're in the East coast heavy rain belt and yesterday morning I vacuumed
out 80 gallons - about the worst it has ever been for our home - mush
worse for others. My wife spent the day vac'ing the indoor/outdoor carpet
down there and we have kept fans on as well as the HVAC fan on constantly
with the A/C on. I was disappointed that it wasn't more dry this morning
but it'still raining here. Not a good scenario for drying. Do you think
that it would be any help to turn on the baseboard electric heat down
there to try to alter the relative humidity and get some of the moisture
into the air and circulating throught the A/C system for dehumidification?
Just a thought but probably not a good one. Opinions please.

Heat and AC? I dunno... what's worked for me is to shut the windows, run a
fan, and run a dehumidifier. Maybe 2 if necessary.

S


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Default Basement flooding

Close windows, turn heat to 90, leave a couple windows cracked open a
couple inches to vent the moisture.

This is the fastest way to dry the place.

The higher temp drives the moisture into the air, you could run a
dehudifier too.

Ever scrub carpets and run AC to dry things? Carpet stays moist for
days.

Heat and dehumidify is how water restoration people handle things



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Stormin Mormon
 
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Default Basement flooding

One problem is that the AC systems I've serviced generally don't
circulate air through the cellar. You may have to temporarily take a
couple of the vent ducts apart, so that the air circulates through the
cellar.

Years ago, I knew a maintenance guy for a hotel. He'd get calls now
and again for an AC leak soaking the carpet of a guest room. He'd go
in with a shop vac, and set the vac in the room. Lean the wand against
the machine, so it was self supporting. You could tell by the sound
change of the motor that it had a good seal to the floor. Leave the
vac running, and come back half hour later. I thought he was just
lazy, but he said that really did remove a LOT of water.

Good luck. I'm sure plenty of other folks want the same answer. Please
let us know what works for you.
--

Christopher A. Young
You can't shout down a troll.
You have to starve them.
..

"C & E" wrote in message
news We're in the East coast heavy rain belt and yesterday morning I
vacuumed out
80 gallons - about the worst it has ever been for our home - mush
worse for
others. My wife spent the day vac'ing the indoor/outdoor carpet down
there
and we have kept fans on as well as the HVAC fan on constantly with
the A/C
on. I was disappointed that it wasn't more dry this morning but
it'still
raining here. Not a good scenario for drying. Do you think that it
would
be any help to turn on the baseboard electric heat down there to try
to
alter the relative humidity and get some of the moisture into the air
and
circulating throught the A/C system for dehumidification? Just a
thought
but probably not a good one. Opinions please.



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C & E
 
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Default Basement flooding


"C & E" wrote in message
news
We're in the East coast heavy rain belt and yesterday morning I vacuumed
out 80 gallons - about the worst it has ever been for our home - mush
worse for others. My wife spent the day vac'ing the indoor/outdoor carpet
down there and we have kept fans on as well as the HVAC fan on constantly
with the A/C on. I was disappointed that it wasn't more dry this morning
but it'still raining here. Not a good scenario for drying. Do you think
that it would be any help to turn on the baseboard electric heat down
there to try to alter the relative humidity and get some of the moisture
into the air and circulating throught the A/C system for dehumidification?
Just a thought but probably not a good one. Opinions please.

Here's the latest if anyone is still watching the thread. The biggest
change occurred when the outside humidity dropped below 80% and we were done
with our 10" of rainfall. Turning on the heat had moisture condensing on
everything - not badly but slightly damp. We have a couple of dehumidifiers
working non-stop. Like I said, when the ouside humidiy broke we opened a
basement door and stationed a box fan there. I opened the door to the
upstairs and drew air down to the basement. Apparently, the return circuit
from the basement was insufficient to affect a change. Things are feeling
pretty good but I'm continuing the fans and dehumdifiers for the remainder
of the week. Thanks to all for the comments and suggestions on permanancy
of repairs. Corrections are in motion. I wish I could get a straight
answer on some of those fancy gutter guards that divert leaves but capture
the water.


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