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-   -   Problem damp corner in front room - condensation? (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/242596-problem-damp-corner-front-room-condensation.html)

[email protected] April 8th 08 04:33 PM

Problem damp corner in front room - condensation?
 
About ten years ago I had some plastering work done with sand /
cement / additive plaster about 1m high across the front of the room,
and the rest of the room just skimmed over. There is a persistant damp
area above the line of the new plaster going up to ceiling height and
appearing to a lesser extent in the hallway by the front door on the
other side of the wall. Paint has 'bubbled' and some of the plaster
skim has blown away from the wall.

One of the walls affected is cavity which has been filled with loose
insulation, but the other can only be half a brick thick as it is the
internal hall / front room wall extending past the front door where
there is an open porch about 1m deep.

I am fairly sure that the damp is condensation but no other part of
the room is affected. There is a radiator under a bay window to the
right of this corner but being in a bay might leave the affected walls
cold. I have installed trickle vents over the double-glazed wooden
sash windows and the room doesn't 'feel' damp.

If necessary I can get at the cavity wall by removing the timber which
closes the cavity where it turns into the bay, and drag out the
insulation and check for water ingress, although obviously I'd rather
not! Shoul I re-plaster, or is there something I can treat the plaster
with? Should I insulate the half-brick wall outside the front door,
and if so how?

Any advice gratefully received

Peter

Phil L April 8th 08 04:45 PM

Problem damp corner in front room - condensation?
 
wrote:
About ten years ago I had some plastering work done with sand /
cement / additive plaster about 1m high across the front of the room,
and the rest of the room just skimmed over. There is a persistant damp
area above the line of the new plaster going up to ceiling height and
appearing to a lesser extent in the hallway by the front door on the
other side of the wall. Paint has 'bubbled' and some of the plaster
skim has blown away from the wall.

One of the walls affected is cavity which has been filled with loose
insulation, but the other can only be half a brick thick as it is the
internal hall / front room wall extending past the front door where
there is an open porch about 1m deep.

I am fairly sure that the damp is condensation but no other part of
the room is affected. There is a radiator under a bay window to the
right of this corner but being in a bay might leave the affected walls
cold. I have installed trickle vents over the double-glazed wooden
sash windows and the room doesn't 'feel' damp.

If necessary I can get at the cavity wall by removing the timber which
closes the cavity where it turns into the bay, and drag out the
insulation and check for water ingress, although obviously I'd rather
not! Shoul I re-plaster, or is there something I can treat the plaster
with? Should I insulate the half-brick wall outside the front door,
and if so how?

Any advice gratefully received

Peter


This sounds supiciously like the CWI has not been installed properly.
1) How long ago were the walls insulated?
2) do you still have the guarantee? - it's probably got the word 'CIGA' on
it
3) Was the problem there prior to inulation works taking place?
4) is your hous cavity wall from DPC to roof or is it clad at the bottom or
top?



Stuart Noble April 8th 08 04:52 PM

Problem damp corner in front room - condensation?
 
wrote:
About ten years ago I had some plastering work done with sand /
cement / additive plaster about 1m high across the front of the room,
and the rest of the room just skimmed over. There is a persistant damp
area above the line of the new plaster going up to ceiling height and
appearing to a lesser extent in the hallway by the front door on the
other side of the wall. Paint has 'bubbled' and some of the plaster
skim has blown away from the wall.

One of the walls affected is cavity which has been filled with loose
insulation, but the other can only be half a brick thick as it is the
internal hall / front room wall extending past the front door where
there is an open porch about 1m deep.

I am fairly sure that the damp is condensation but no other part of
the room is affected. There is a radiator under a bay window to the
right of this corner but being in a bay might leave the affected walls
cold. I have installed trickle vents over the double-glazed wooden
sash windows and the room doesn't 'feel' damp.

If necessary I can get at the cavity wall by removing the timber which
closes the cavity where it turns into the bay, and drag out the
insulation and check for water ingress, although obviously I'd rather
not! Shoul I re-plaster, or is there something I can treat the plaster
with? Should I insulate the half-brick wall outside the front door,
and if so how?

Any advice gratefully received

Peter


Not much help but.....

penetrating damp is most common on south/south west facing walls. If
your half brick wall points that way, I'd say that was the problem.

that much condensation would be unusual if the radiator was functioning
normally. If you get damp there in the summer, it's almost certainly not
condensation.

George \(dicegeorge\) April 9th 08 06:47 PM

Problem damp corner in front room - condensation?
 
Problem damp corner in front room - condensation?

What im thinking of doing
is marking a few points A B C D...
on some damp places
and every day taking readings with a damp meter gizmo
and writing them down with the day's weather
then a month later make a graph
then somehow figuring out if it's rain or condensation..

(However I know its because of the gaps between some slates)



--

[george]




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