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[email protected] August 14th 05 02:03 PM

trouble-shooting water-soaked crawlspace insualtion
 
I noticed my carpet was moist in a spot in my house. So I knew
something was not right.
I went into my crawlspace and saw where the insulation was soaked
especially near the center of the house near where plumbing pipes are.
There were some small puddles of water. In the past I have had a leak
in my condensation line from my air conditioner that caused the same
problems.
I first went to check my water meter to see if there was a
property-side leak in my plumbing system...no indication of that.
There was no smell to indicate drainage leak from sewer discharge.
Plus, most of the water was in the insulation...just some water puddle.
I heard no dripping. I called the on-call plumber and he suggested it
was more likely the AC based on the conditions I described.
I had the AC repair come and they determined it was not the
condensation line or refrigeration line. He told me that he didn't
think it was plumbing or Id have a lot more water in the crawlspace and
would have noticed wet areas in areas of the house where plumbing is.

He told me it was probably moisture build-up from humidity. Since it
was in the center of the crawlspace and was dry near the crawlspace
entrance. Does this sound plausible?
The insulation is soaked, I have foundation vents and plastic on the
crawlspace soil floor.

Any ideas on what is going on? remedies??


Harry K August 14th 05 02:24 PM


wrote:
I noticed my carpet was moist in a spot in my house. So I knew
something was not right.
I went into my crawlspace and saw where the insulation was soaked
especially near the center of the house near where plumbing pipes are.
There were some small puddles of water. In the past I have had a leak
in my condensation line from my air conditioner that caused the same
problems.
I first went to check my water meter to see if there was a
property-side leak in my plumbing system...no indication of that.
There was no smell to indicate drainage leak from sewer discharge.
Plus, most of the water was in the insulation...just some water puddle.
I heard no dripping. I called the on-call plumber and he suggested it
was more likely the AC based on the conditions I described.
I had the AC repair come and they determined it was not the
condensation line or refrigeration line. He told me that he didn't
think it was plumbing or Id have a lot more water in the crawlspace and
would have noticed wet areas in areas of the house where plumbing is.

He told me it was probably moisture build-up from humidity. Since it
was in the center of the crawlspace and was dry near the crawlspace
entrance. Does this sound plausible?
The insulation is soaked, I have foundation vents and plastic on the
crawlspace soil floor.

Any ideas on what is going on? remedies??


Yes, pull out the soaked insulation for starters. It is now useless,
actually will damage whatever it is in contact with. Get rid of it
then find out where the water is coming from. I find it highly unlikely
that it is from humidity. It would have to be almost a sauna in order
to 'soak' insulation.

Harry K


[email protected] August 14th 05 03:02 PM

Would it be a good idea to have the plumber look...I dont know much at
all about home repair.


Pop August 14th 05 04:05 PM


wrote in message
oups.com...
: Would it be a good idea to have the plumber look...I dont know
much at
: all about home repair.
:
Might be better to get a "general" type of contractor or handyman
in IFF you can find one who neighbors or somenone likes and has
done business with. Be sure they're bonded and licensed to work
where you are.

Get the insulation pulled out, locate the source of the water,
and fix it. If the handyman can't handle it, then it's time for
the big bucks for a specialist. It's highly likely a general
contractor can handle that.

Assuming no one buried a dryer vent etc. in there somewhe

My assumption is that you have a plumbing leak (supply or drain)
which is running along pipes/beams/joists to a low spot where it
finally falls thru into the insulation. To trace it might mean
removing more insulation to see just where it's coming from and
the source could be a long ways from where the water is being
found.

HTH,
Pop



Paul Franklin August 14th 05 05:19 PM

On 14 Aug 2005 06:03:12 -0700, wrote:

I noticed my carpet was moist in a spot in my house. So I knew
something was not right.
I went into my crawlspace and saw where the insulation was soaked
especially near the center of the house near where plumbing pipes are.
There were some small puddles of water. In the past I have had a leak
in my condensation line from my air conditioner that caused the same
problems.
I first went to check my water meter to see if there was a
property-side leak in my plumbing system...no indication of that.
There was no smell to indicate drainage leak from sewer discharge.
Plus, most of the water was in the insulation...just some water puddle.
I heard no dripping. I called the on-call plumber and he suggested it
was more likely the AC based on the conditions I described.
I had the AC repair come and they determined it was not the
condensation line or refrigeration line. He told me that he didn't
think it was plumbing or Id have a lot more water in the crawlspace and
would have noticed wet areas in areas of the house where plumbing is.

He told me it was probably moisture build-up from humidity. Since it
was in the center of the crawlspace and was dry near the crawlspace
entrance. Does this sound plausible?
The insulation is soaked, I have foundation vents and plastic on the
crawlspace soil floor.

Any ideas on what is going on? remedies??


As others have said, pull out all the wet insulation and rule out
plumbing leaks and the A/C drain.

But it certainly is possilble for the condition you describe to be
caused by moisure in the air. Because you are running the A/C, the
floor is cool. Warm moist air rising in the crawlspace, if not sealed
out by a perfect vapor barrier, will condense on the underside of the
cool flooring. Note: this does not mean you should staple plastic to
the underside of the joists, this will just cause the problem to
switch seasons.

There was an excellent article in the Journal of Light Construction
sometime in the last year or two about ways to deal with this. Don't
know if it's available online or not. They had lots of pictures of
houses with rotted framing where the only source of moisture was the
crawlspace air.

A first step is to make sure the plastic covering the crawlspace floor
is sealed to the walls, all the seams are overlapped and taped, and
there are no tears or uncovered areas. If there is any moisture in
the ground, you want to keep it there. Likewise, if moisure is
wicking through the crawlspace walls, you need to fix that.

But even with those steps, if you live in an area where the humidity
is high, there can be enough water in the air to cause the problem you
are seeing.

HTH,

Paul


[email protected] August 14th 05 05:51 PM

Im in North Carolina, it is presently 90 degrees F with 60% humidity.
There has been highs in the 90s with lots of rain past days.


EXT August 14th 05 06:25 PM

Had a similar problem a few years ago. I was having water drip into my
finished basement through an access door in the ceiling. We matched the
dripping to times of rain and had eliminated all plumbing leaks, as a
bathroom was very near the access door.

The final source of the water was a split in a fibreglass shingle. The water
followed the plywood roof sheathing to the next seam, dripped onto the
insulation and down to the ceiling vapour barrier. It then followed an
opening in the vapour barrier where a plumbing vent pipe went down within a
wall. The vent pipe made a 90 degree turn just above the access door in the
basement. The water followed the pipe down to the elbow and then dripped
through the door edges. This all took about 3 days of rainy weather to trace
the source of the water.

On the first dry day, a tube of silicone caulk plugged the split (along with
a number of others that were starting to crack) and elimininated any more
water gaining access.

Water can come through anywhere. In my opinion soaked insulation would not
occur with high humidity, but can be caused by a rain leak, supply or drain
plumbing leak or condensation on cold water pipes or condensation lines.
Keep looking for the source it is somewhere.

wrote in message
ups.com...
I noticed my carpet was moist in a spot in my house. So I knew
something was not right.
I went into my crawlspace and saw where the insulation was soaked
especially near the center of the house near where plumbing pipes are.
There were some small puddles of water. In the past I have had a leak
in my condensation line from my air conditioner that caused the same
problems.
I first went to check my water meter to see if there was a
property-side leak in my plumbing system...no indication of that.
There was no smell to indicate drainage leak from sewer discharge.
Plus, most of the water was in the insulation...just some water puddle.
I heard no dripping. I called the on-call plumber and he suggested it
was more likely the AC based on the conditions I described.
I had the AC repair come and they determined it was not the
condensation line or refrigeration line. He told me that he didn't
think it was plumbing or Id have a lot more water in the crawlspace and
would have noticed wet areas in areas of the house where plumbing is.

He told me it was probably moisture build-up from humidity. Since it
was in the center of the crawlspace and was dry near the crawlspace
entrance. Does this sound plausible?
The insulation is soaked, I have foundation vents and plastic on the
crawlspace soil floor.

Any ideas on what is going on? remedies??




[email protected] August 14th 05 08:59 PM

Were the effects seen at the same time as the rain or was it delayed a
day.

I did have a new roof put on in November


joe August 14th 05 10:51 PM

EXT wrote:
Had a similar problem a few years ago. I was having water drip into my
finished basement through an access door in the ceiling. We matched the
dripping to times of rain and had eliminated all plumbing leaks, as a
bathroom was very near the access door.


similar problem here. the rubber vent pipe gasket where it goes thru
the roof and roof flange cracked and when it rained water followed the
vent pipe thru the wall to the crawl space flooding an area of the crawl
and insulation.

EXT August 14th 05 11:10 PM

Since it dripped on our heads and onto a carpet it was quickly noticed. The
delay in a real bad summer thunderstorm was not delayed much, probably less
than an hour. If you just had a new roof you may want to go up there and
check it out. It doesn't take much to let some rain in. Mine was a crack
less than an inch in length in a shingle hidden inside the space between two
tabs which let water trickle through the roof. It was hard to find, but
obvious once I found it. I also noticed some other cracks forming. In a new
roof there may be a bad flashing or other seal on something that penetrates
the roof, or something similar.

wrote in message
ups.com...
Were the effects seen at the same time as the rain or was it delayed a
day.

I did have a new roof put on in November





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