It works just as well on old buildings as new, what's the problem with it?[/quote]
It fundamentally misunderstands how old buildings work. It adds non-porous, non flexible materials to buildings which depend on porous and flexible materials in all sorts of ways. It moves damp problems into other parts of the building. It masks the real issue, which is almost always to do with lack of ventilation, concentrated sources of damp, raised ground levels, inappropriate repairs or finishes, or service penetrations.
There are two fundamentally different approaches to keeping a building dry: the modern one with impermeable materials used strategically (DPM, DPC, etc), and the old one which uses lime and porous materials (including bricks as well as lime based renders and plasters) which absorb moisture when conditions are damp and release it when conditions dry, relying on good ventilation. They both work absolutely beautifully, but they are incompatible. The issues always arise when there is an attempt at a hybrid of the two.......modern interventions in an old house. Most timber frame houses were absolutely perfect for 400 years, until they were renovated in the 70's and rendered with sand/ cement, and had a concrete floor with DPM inserted. Within a couple of decades, most of the sole plates in those buildings had rotted away. Same with lime-mortared brick buildings which were repointed with sand cement mortar, or rendered with cement based render. Unrenovated buildings, without DPMs and DPCs, are still absolutely fine for another few centuries.
Thoughtless and inappropriate modern interventions, such as injected DPCs and internal tanking, are a disaster for old buildings. If I had my way they would be banned for any house built before about 1950.[/quote]
That all makes sense. I wasn't thinking of timber framed buildings, we dont get many of them around here, the peak district. I was more thinking of terraced brick built houses with solid double skin brick walls. What about older places with solid stone walls? Is tanking acceptable then?
What damage can it cause apart from the timber rotting?