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Metal threshold results in ice indoors
Our front door has an aluminum alloy threshold, and we have just noticed
that ice is forming on the indoor side of it; this, when it melts, will not be good for our wooden floor. What must be happening, I am sure, is that, because the outdoor temperature is now well below freezing, water-vapor from the indoor air is condensing an freezing on the surface. Short of (a) replacing the threshold by a wooden one or (b) cutting the aluminum one lengthwise and interposing a "thermal barrier" between the two sections, what's a good way of solving this problem? Perce |
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