Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair,alt.building.construction,misc.consumers.house
Harry Muscle
 
Posts: n/a
Default Vapour barrier and water proof paint in insulated basement walls?

I have a couple quick questions about my basement walls.

My original plan was to paint the concrete basement walls with DryLok
paint or something similar to keep moisture levels down and to
eliminate any possibilites of water leaking in (there's one spot where
there was leakage before, but I haven't noticed any for about a year
now). After painting with DryLok I would insulated all the walls, add
vapour barrier, then add drywall. However, I got thinking ... wouldn't
the DryLok paint and vapour barrier both act as vapour barriers? And
isn't a vapour barrier supposed to be only on the warm side of the
wall? So wouldn't using both cause condensation problems? Actually
wouldn't using the DryLok itself in an insulated wall cause
condensation problems since in effect you have a vapour barrier on the
cold side? Or am I just not understanding this correctly?

Thanks,
Harry

  #2   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair,alt.building.construction,misc.consumers.house
Sev
 
Posts: n/a
Default Vapour barrier and water proof paint in insulated basement walls?

It's still correct to use the vapor barrier- which is to block
moisture from warm, heated space penetrating and condensing in cold,
unheated space, causing problems there. However, you still need to
solve your moisture intrusion problem from outside, which is not always
easy, or cheap. First, though, be very scrupulous in making sure all
drainage is directed away from foundation. Take a look outside that
area of previous leak and see if you can't improve things somehow,
alter slope, extend leader, etc.

  #3   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair,alt.building.construction,misc.consumers.house
DT
 
Posts: n/a
Default Vapour barrier and water proof paint in insulated basement walls?

It's a complex subject. For a lot of actual performance tested results, try the
Building Science Corporation at:

http://www.buildingscience.com/resources/homeowner.htm

There is a section on basement insulation methods. The bottom line is that the
only insulation type that works is rigid insulating board, but you need to
study the issues on vapor barriers and moisture dynamics in the reports to see
how it applies to your situation

Dennis

  #4   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair,alt.building.construction,misc.consumers.house
Joseph Meehan
 
Posts: n/a
Default Vapour barrier and water proof paint in insulated basement walls?

Harry Muscle wrote:
I have a couple quick questions about my basement walls.

My original plan was to paint the concrete basement walls with DryLok
paint or something similar to keep moisture levels down and to
eliminate any possibilites of water leaking in (there's one spot where
there was leakage before, but I haven't noticed any for about a year
now). After painting with DryLok I would insulated all the walls, add
vapour barrier, then add drywall. However, I got thinking ...
wouldn't the DryLok paint and vapour barrier both act as vapour
barriers? And isn't a vapour barrier supposed to be only on the warm
side of the wall? So wouldn't using both cause condensation
problems? Actually wouldn't using the DryLok itself in an insulated
wall cause condensation problems since in effect you have a vapour
barrier on the cold side? Or am I just not understanding this
correctly?

Thanks,
Harry


I would suggest doing the DryLok first then waiting until you have had a
very wet year without any leaks before proceeding. DryLok does a very poor
job of blocking moisture. If you have moisture problems you need to address
the problem not the symptom (the leak). You need to work outside to stop
leaks not inside.

I would not put that kind of work into a basement until I was sure all
moisture problems were resolved.

--
Joseph Meehan

Dia duit


  #5   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair,alt.building.construction,misc.consumers.house
Dick Russell
 
Posts: n/a
Default Vapour barrier and water proof paint in insulated basement walls?

Joseph Meehan is right about solving any outside water entry problems
first. If outside water isn't allowed to drain away from the footings
to lower ground, it will find its way into any crack and force its way
past any covering on the inner wall of the concrete.
You haven't said how you would apply insulation to the inside. A common
way is to mount studs and put insulation batts between, then the vapor
barrier and drywall. Structurally that's fine, but if you don't provide
a very tight seal around the edges of the wall, humidity will diffuse
into the air spaces of the insulation and, in humid summer days,
condense on the cold concrete surface. That could give you a musty
smelling cellar or mold. This is another reason for building new houses
with extruded polystyrene boards on the outside of the foundation
walls, from footing up to the sill (protected above grade, of course).
This puts the concrete mass on the warm side of the insulation, helps
keep out water from passing through the walls from the ground, and
prevents condensation on those humid summer days. Retrofits to do it
this way aren't easy, so applying the insulation inside must be done so
as to keep the air from contacting the cold concrete.



  #6   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair,alt.building.construction,misc.consumers.house
Al Bundy
 
Posts: n/a
Default Vapour barrier and water proof paint in insulated basement walls?

"Harry Muscle" wrote in
ups.com:

I have a couple quick questions about my basement walls.

My original plan was to paint the concrete basement walls with DryLok
paint or something similar to keep moisture levels down and to
eliminate any possibilites of water leaking in (there's one spot where
there was leakage before, but I haven't noticed any for about a year
now). After painting with DryLok I would insulated all the walls, add
vapour barrier, then add drywall. However, I got thinking ... wouldn't
the DryLok paint and vapour barrier both act as vapour barriers? And
isn't a vapour barrier supposed to be only on the warm side of the
wall? So wouldn't using both cause condensation problems? Actually
wouldn't using the DryLok itself in an insulated wall cause
condensation problems since in effect you have a vapour barrier on the
cold side? Or am I just not understanding this correctly?

Thanks,
Harry



Harry:

The cart goes behind the horse.

As Joseph Meehan said:

You need to work outside to stop leaks not inside.

Exactly. Assuming your place is not in a pit, gutters can do wonders if
you don't have them.

And as Sev said:

.... be very scrupulous in making sure all drainage is directed away
from foundation.


I'm sure there are many schools of thought on what it should be. Of
course you can do a bang-up job with new construction. With a pickup,
wheelbarrow, shovel and tamp, how good a job you can do depends on how
bad the drainage issue is. Anything is better than flat except a pit of
course.
  #7   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair,alt.building.construction,misc.consumers.house
Harry Muscle
 
Posts: n/a
Default Vapour barrier and water proof paint in insulated basement walls?

Actually I believe I have solved the issue on the outside. As
mentioned in the first post, I used to have water seeping in, but I
haven't had any since last year when I redirected my downspouts away
from the house. There's been several very heavy down pours since then
and nothing seeped in, so I'm pretty confident in that, however, I
always have a habit of going overboard so that's why I was thinking of
painting the walls with DryLok.

That link posted by DT looks really interested though, and I'm thinking
I'm going to pursue what it says there by using the extruded
polystyrene. I haven't gotten thru the whole article yet though, so
I'm not sure if that would make the DryLok uneccessary or what?

Thanks for all the responses so far,
Harry

  #8   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair,alt.building.construction,misc.consumers.house
Peter Shepherd
 
Posts: n/a
Default Vapour barrier and water proof paint in insulated basement walls?

One engineer's basement I put 2" extruded styrofoam on using Bailey retainer
tee's instead of studs, and tapcons into the block wall.
Acoustic sealant in the styrofoam joints to complete v. barrier.

If you want to go all out on preventing mold on drywall, as I think you're
close to Toronto, you could also try

DensArmour Plus Paperless Drywall [avoids future rot] available at:

Patene - Hornby, 401 & Trafalgar - 4 x 8 - 1/2", 19.65 / sheet, vs
regular white = 13.00/sheet, green drywall = 19.84, agent says DesArmour may
altogether supplant green drywall soon, except if older is heavily
discounted to builders, has
exactly same finish as regular drywall, no charge for /= 20 sheets, but if
only 5 or 10 $40 or 50 to Oakville. Do ship to Toronto, have bundle with
another order, no charge if able to schedule with other orders. (Feb 06 $)

If you're retrofitting higher than basement & want the ultimate in vapour
barrier [though I'm not sure how much use it is in retrofit without being
able to join around top plates etc]

- Certainteed "MemBrain" nylon vapour barrier with variable perm rating.


MultiGlass in Toronto has new nylon vapour retarder :

Price of Membrain, 8' (100") = 800' sq $147.00/roll + tax
9' (again + 4" overlap) = 900' sq $166.00
10' (again + 4" overlap) 185.00
12' (again + 4" overlap) 222.00

Peter Shepherd

"Harry Muscle" wrote in message
oups.com...
Actually I believe I have solved the issue on the outside. As
mentioned in the first post, I used to have water seeping in, but I
haven't had any since last year when I redirected my downspouts away
from the house. There's been several very heavy down pours since then
and nothing seeped in, so I'm pretty confident in that, however, I
always have a habit of going overboard so that's why I was thinking of
painting the walls with DryLok.

That link posted by DT looks really interested though, and I'm thinking
I'm going to pursue what it says there by using the extruded
polystyrene. I haven't gotten thru the whole article yet though, so
I'm not sure if that would make the DryLok uneccessary or what?

Thanks for all the responses so far,
Harry



Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
The #1 rated home water filter in America Aquasana AQ-4000 nitin Home Ownership 0 December 14th 05 07:02 AM
The #1 rated home water filter in America Aquasana AQ-4000 nitin Home Repair 3 December 13th 05 02:31 PM
The #1 rated home water filter in America Aquasana AQ-4000 nitin Home Ownership 1 December 13th 05 01:54 PM
The #1 rated home water filter in America Aquasana AQ-4000 nitin Home Ownership 0 December 13th 05 08:44 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:25 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"