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Joseph Meehan Joseph Meehan is offline
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Default Moisture in walls - what to do

Dave wrote:
"Joseph Meehan" wrote:

Dave wrote:
"Joseph Meehan" wrote:

Dave wrote:
I have moisture in walls in a three spots. This is a concrete
house. One wall has red brick inside but it is encased in
concrete.


The moisture is coming into the home somehow. If it is not a
plumbing leak. Possible, but it does not sound likely, then I would
would think rain is your problem. You need to find the source and
eliminate it (them). They may not be near where you are seeing the
results. Finding them can be difficult sometimes. Someone with
experience is more likely to be able to find them.

Good Luck

What I would like to know is how long does it take for concrete to
dry out if receives no water from outside source.


Thank you for your reply.


Is the concrete in contact with the ground? If so it depends on
the moisture in the ground and how easily it flows through the
ground. Not all concrete is the same so that will add to the
variations what is the humidity and is the air still or is it
moving? Is the area closed off or does it have free circulation
with the rest of the house - outside.


The concrete is not in contact with ground. The slab which the wall
is in contact is about 10 feet from ground. There's a a big "crawling
space". The downsprout goes through the slab at the very point of
both moist wall points.


I would think that would be an important observation. I would look
there very carefully.


Looking at the places from below in the crawling space I can't see
any wet spots there. That is why I'm inclining to think it is not a
leaking pipe allthough the copper pipes are 30-40 years old.


There are just far too many variables to come up with any kind of
easy answer. It is far easier to measure it. It is my experience
that it takes a typical wood frame home about two days to dry out
from a typical warm humid day, when the home is closed up and A/C is
turned on. You mileage will likely vary based on your local
conditions and construction as well as furnishings.


The concrete looks a bit porous but it is concrete.



About a week ago the downsprout was sweating but a day later it
warmed outside it is it not moist anymore.


--
Joseph Meehan

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