BraithwaiteA
New member
Hi everyone. As is traditional with first posts: please move this if it's in the wrong place.
I had a detached block workshop built towards the end of the summer, and it got thoroughly soaked before the roof went on. It then got more exciting water ingress through faulty render. This has now been repaired, but it's winter and the place never got dry. Cardboard wilts, there's mildew on my plywood and I've had to oil all my metal to stop it rusting. I'm going to insulate the roof, which will hopefully stop me being dripped on all the time from the condensation, and when the electrician comes next week there will also be an extractor fan.
I'm wondering if anyone has any recommendations for electric heating which can be left on unattended for long periods? Obviously, there aren't lots of soft furnishings, but I'm worried about leaving a heater in there 24/7 which is really what it needs to dry out properly. I've run a fan heater when I'm in there and then flung open the door and window to 'vent', but it's still very damp.
Also, if anyone has any tips for cleaning off mildew without adding more water to the situation, that would be very much appreciated! I tried wiping down with bleach-water and it seems to be worse.
I had a detached block workshop built towards the end of the summer, and it got thoroughly soaked before the roof went on. It then got more exciting water ingress through faulty render. This has now been repaired, but it's winter and the place never got dry. Cardboard wilts, there's mildew on my plywood and I've had to oil all my metal to stop it rusting. I'm going to insulate the roof, which will hopefully stop me being dripped on all the time from the condensation, and when the electrician comes next week there will also be an extractor fan.
I'm wondering if anyone has any recommendations for electric heating which can be left on unattended for long periods? Obviously, there aren't lots of soft furnishings, but I'm worried about leaving a heater in there 24/7 which is really what it needs to dry out properly. I've run a fan heater when I'm in there and then flung open the door and window to 'vent', but it's still very damp.
Also, if anyone has any tips for cleaning off mildew without adding more water to the situation, that would be very much appreciated! I tried wiping down with bleach-water and it seems to be worse.