Do you always need to replace render and plaster?
Posted: Fri Jun 19, 2009 3:22 am
Hi there,
Great forum you have here. I am new so please be kind :)
After reading this forum for a while and checking websites there are still some aspects of the cream based DPC treatment that don't seem to have a consistent answer that I am hoping to get some clarification on.
I have a damp problem the front bedroom of the house which is at the high part of the block. 100 year old house in Sydney, Australia (solid double brick on sandstone foundations).
The walls are damp to the touch up to a certain point, especially after rainy spells. Had the odd contractor around to assess and they all say the original DPC (slate?) has obviously been compomised and so need a new one.
Thing is I have no visible signs of the damp on the internal wall e.g. efflourescence etc (although there is on the external walls)
I really would rather not rip the floorboards off, or replace render/plaster if I really don't need to.
So to my joy when I read the following at http://www.ultimatehandyman.co.uk/damp/ ... oofing.htm)
Best practice, though perhaps not always the most practical, is to leave the plaster above the new damp proof course on the wall for several months following the DPC treatment. This allows the salts to surface during the drying out process and the extent of plaster replacement to be properly ascertained.
So questions are:
* Can I inject a cream based DPC and leave the render and plaster on for a few months to see how it works, or if the plaster becomes obviously damaged.
* Can I repair and repaint external wall straight away or does that need to be left as is to allow drying out to outside to occur (I saw one post saying to apply silicone paint straight away, but then suggesting that the moisture would be carried away by wind from the drying out wall)
* Do I really need to inject DOC all around the whole room or just on the walls that seem bad. (one contractor said I needed to do the whole house, internal and external to avoid moving problem from one place to the next)
Thanks in advance
Michael
Great forum you have here. I am new so please be kind :)
After reading this forum for a while and checking websites there are still some aspects of the cream based DPC treatment that don't seem to have a consistent answer that I am hoping to get some clarification on.
I have a damp problem the front bedroom of the house which is at the high part of the block. 100 year old house in Sydney, Australia (solid double brick on sandstone foundations).
The walls are damp to the touch up to a certain point, especially after rainy spells. Had the odd contractor around to assess and they all say the original DPC (slate?) has obviously been compomised and so need a new one.
Thing is I have no visible signs of the damp on the internal wall e.g. efflourescence etc (although there is on the external walls)
I really would rather not rip the floorboards off, or replace render/plaster if I really don't need to.
So to my joy when I read the following at http://www.ultimatehandyman.co.uk/damp/ ... oofing.htm)
Best practice, though perhaps not always the most practical, is to leave the plaster above the new damp proof course on the wall for several months following the DPC treatment. This allows the salts to surface during the drying out process and the extent of plaster replacement to be properly ascertained.
So questions are:
* Can I inject a cream based DPC and leave the render and plaster on for a few months to see how it works, or if the plaster becomes obviously damaged.
* Can I repair and repaint external wall straight away or does that need to be left as is to allow drying out to outside to occur (I saw one post saying to apply silicone paint straight away, but then suggesting that the moisture would be carried away by wind from the drying out wall)
* Do I really need to inject DOC all around the whole room or just on the walls that seem bad. (one contractor said I needed to do the whole house, internal and external to avoid moving problem from one place to the next)
Thanks in advance
Michael