Doug71
Established Member
Trying to work out where the damp is coming from in a wall/ceiling.
It's an old house (my mothers) and we are gradually working through the list and getting the damp problems sorted but I can't fathom this one out.
The main wall in the photos is an internal wall (always has been), the one you can just see to the left is external, both are solid brick and have been dry lined at some point, I think laths fixed to the walls with plasterboard over and I think there is Kingspan behind the plasterboard on the external wall. There is a bedroom above.
The floor joist are parallel to the external wall so it's not damp tracking along one of those.
I took up some floorboards above and there was nothing obvious apart from the damp marks on the plasterboard. I trimmed a bit off the end of the ceiling plasterboard where it touched the old wall so damp couldn't go from one to the other but this made no difference.
There are no heating or water pipes anywhere near it.
There is no sign of anything similar on the other side of the internal wall.
I am told the internal wall used to be really damp, could it be damp air trapped behind the plasterboard (might be foil backed) which is condensing when it hits the ceiling? I say this because where the damp patches drape down on the wall is between the laths that the boards are fixed to. Anybody come across anything like this?
I will be removing some plasterboard to take a look behind but wondered if anyone had any other ideas about what it could be?
Thanks, Doug
It's an old house (my mothers) and we are gradually working through the list and getting the damp problems sorted but I can't fathom this one out.
The main wall in the photos is an internal wall (always has been), the one you can just see to the left is external, both are solid brick and have been dry lined at some point, I think laths fixed to the walls with plasterboard over and I think there is Kingspan behind the plasterboard on the external wall. There is a bedroom above.
The floor joist are parallel to the external wall so it's not damp tracking along one of those.
I took up some floorboards above and there was nothing obvious apart from the damp marks on the plasterboard. I trimmed a bit off the end of the ceiling plasterboard where it touched the old wall so damp couldn't go from one to the other but this made no difference.
There are no heating or water pipes anywhere near it.
There is no sign of anything similar on the other side of the internal wall.
I am told the internal wall used to be really damp, could it be damp air trapped behind the plasterboard (might be foil backed) which is condensing when it hits the ceiling? I say this because where the damp patches drape down on the wall is between the laths that the boards are fixed to. Anybody come across anything like this?
I will be removing some plasterboard to take a look behind but wondered if anyone had any other ideas about what it could be?
Thanks, Doug