Do any of the bogus
statements below affect you and your building?
Contact us if you
need help with damp - 01626 872886 .
If you'd like to
send us the details of your problem complete our Dampness
questionnaire.
We are long term
members of the PCA - The Property
Care Association - the professional body for the Damp Proofing industry
and our Dampness Surveyors have over 50 years of experience between
them.
Want Help
choosing a Contractor - E: Mail us at help@propertyrepairsystems.co.uk
Misleading Statement 1.
Injected damp
proof courses are always the answer - no, they are
often not an
answer to anything
I
don't want to read a lot - click here for the most
likely answer and solution
Although Chemical damp-proof
courses should be installed in a position in accordance with
good practice as described in BS 6576:1985, "Code of Practice for
the Installation of Chemical Damp-proof Courses", a minimum of
150mm (6 inches) above external ground level, in external walls, often
they are not. If the installer does not follow the basic rules the damp
proof course will be useless.
Additional rules apply to
cavity walls, vertical damp proof courses and internal walls. In most
cases these rules are not followed.
The objective is to provide
a water repellent or pore blocking material in a continuous horizontal
band in the masonry, to act as an effective 'barrier' to water rising
from the ground.
However, in most cases, even
where such a barrier is installed, it achieves nothing for three reasons:
1. The moisture already
above the damp proof course level will be evaporating through the
plaster inside the building, depositing 'salts' of various types in
the plaster, paint and paper. Installing a new damp proof course cannot
reverse this process.
2. Some of the salts can
be 'hygroscopic' - that means that they attract moisture from the
air in the building. This process means that the wall will NEVER truly
dry out.
3. Damp proofing work is
often accompanied by replastering or even 'tanking' - these processes
firstly add water to the wall, but worse they can cause the residual
damp to be driven higher, because they reduce or eliminate evaporation
at the surface. Only evaporation can dry out the wall, to some extent,
depending on the degree of salt contamination.
Chemical Damp Proof Courses
are usually injected into holes varying in diameter from 10mm to 22mm.
Sometimes these holes have
been injected several times over the years, or new rows of holes have
been drilled. Note the thicker mortar line where the original damp proof
course is sitting - the loss of surface mortar is not significant and
does not mean that the DPC is damaged - this can simply be repointed.
Also note the blue/black
Engineering Bricks below the original DPC - these are very hard and
tough and do not readily absorb water. There should be no need in this
case to insert a new damp proof course.
Check the source of your
damp for yourself - it is not difficult - click
here
See our Article about installing
different types of Damp Proof Course - click
here.
See our Shop for damp proofing
pumps and equipment - click
here
For help
with installation methods and rules call our experts on 01626 872886 .
The answer is usually:
That the dampness was caused
by raised external ground levels or a water leak from a drain, a water
main, a foul water pipe or a central heating pipe. We will help you
or your Builder/Plumber to find the cause.
The solution is:
Lower the ground level, or
find and fix the leak(s), remove the indoor plaster (if damaged) and
fit our Mesh Membrane - then replaster. A Guaranteed result - guaranteed
for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Misleading Statement 2 - usually
implicit
All Rising Damp
is Natural - no, most of it is entirely man-made
'True' rising damp is entirely
natural ground water rising by capillary action through porous building
materials. The natural water in the ground under a building climbs
up through the porous parts of the walls and floors up to the point
where surface evaporation stops further climb.
This natural rising damp
is extremely rare in buildings that have any kind of damp proof course
- slate, bitumen or plastic. It will not normal climb very high - say
6 to 9 inches (150 to 225mm) above the skirting board and even that
process will take tens of years.
And yet this is the
only type of rising damp recognised by most Damp Proofing Specialists.
Man-made Rising Damp arises
from water leaks and 'bridging' of the damp proof course. It is usually
much more damp to the touch because more water, nearer to the surface
is available, so the damage is more sudden and severe. This is the most
common cause of ground floor damp symptoms in buildings today and it
is not cured by installing a new damp proof course of any kind. Moisture
can rise much higher (over a metre) and move much quicker (within days
or weeks of a leak).
Above - Natural or Man Made
Rising damp in Blue
Below - Man Made Rising Damp
- water leak
Before spending money on
any kind of damp proofing go to our Diagnosis page and check the source
of your damp for yourself - we don't mind explaining - click
here
For help
with the causes of damp call our experts on 01626 872886 .
The answer is usually:
That the dampness was not
Natural at all, but was caused by raised external ground levels or a
water leak from a drain, a water main, a foul water pipe or a central
heating pipe. We will help you or your Builder/Plumber to find the cause.
The solution is:
Lower the ground level, or
find and fix the leak(s), remove the indoor plaster (if damaged) and
fit our Mesh Membrane - then replaster. A Guaranteed result - guaranteed
for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Misleading Statement 3 - usually
no other cause is considered.
Rising Damp explains
most problems - no, mostly it is a myth
Because most dampness problems
in buildings are NOT caused by natural rising dampness.
They are entirely Man Made!
In most cases they are caused
by building defects, such as:
- water leaks inside the
building - particularly in modern buildings fitted with plastic damp
proof course and membrane materials
- water leaks under the
building or from next door or the road - particularly in older buildings,
built prior to the use of plastics
- 'bridging' of the damp
proof course - mainly by paths, roads, steps and added structures
Before spending money on
any form of damp proofing go to our Diagnosis page and check your damp
for yourself - it is easy to read, non technical stuff - click
here
For help
with the MYTHS call our experts on 01626 872886 .
Typical example
- yes the damp is rising, but it is not natural ground dampness
A water leak will be found
next door - in this case, a leaking Main.
The answer is usually:
That the dampness was not
Natural at all, but was caused by a water leak from a drain, a water
main, a foul water pipe or a central heating pipe. Do not rule out leaks
being from a neighboring property or road. Always look inside neighboring
properties to be safe. We will help you or your Builder/Plumber to find
the cause.
The solution is:
Find and fix the leak(s),
remove the indoor plaster (if damaged) and fit our Mesh Membrane - then
replaster. A Guaranteed result - guaranteed for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Misleading Statement 4 - often
stated in reports and estimates
House damp proof
courses break down with age - no, actually, they
don't
There is no evidence that
Damp Proof Courses (DPCs) fail in service and yet a whole Industry has
been created around this idea.
This may be because the outer
edges of damp proof courses (visible as black lines between the bricks
or stones) are not always hidden by the joint mortar, so can look a little
ragged with age. This appearance has no bearing on their performance at
all.
Traditional damp proof courses
(slate, stone, bitumen) do not break down inside the wall! There is
nothing there to harm them, unless a Builder knocks out a hole for a
new doorway. Neither do modern plastic DPCs break down - so never accept
such a statement.
Inside the wall structure
they are well protected, so they do not need replacement, unless mechanically
damaged by a building alteration or ground movement.
Before spending money on
any form of damp proofing go to our Diagnosis page and check your damp
for yourself - there is nothing to lose - click
here
For help
with diagnosis call our qualified experts on 01626 872886 .
Below - some
mortar has fallen out of the damp proof course edge - not a fault
Damp proof courses are not
faulty just because the covering mortar falls out.
The answer is usually:
That the damp proof course
did not break down, but that the dampness was caused by raised external
ground levels or a water leak from a drain, a water main, a foul water
pipe or a central heating pipe. We will help you or your Builder/Plumber
to find the cause.
The solution is:
Lower the ground level, or
find and fix the leak(s), remove the indoor plaster (if damaged) and
fit our Mesh Membrane - then replaster. A Guaranteed result - guaranteed
for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Misleading Statement 5 - salts
are rarely mentioned
Damp walls will
dry out in time - no, often they will not, because
of 'salts'
The only continuous pathways
through which water can rise through a wall are the mortar beds: for
water to pass, say, from brick to brick it must still cross a mortar
bed. It is therefore essential that the damp-proofing material impregnates
the mortar courses since these form the major pathway for the rise of
water within walls. Damp-proofing the masonry units (e.g. bricks) porous
tubes is of very little value!
Porous mortar and impervious/water
repellent brickwork will still allow rising dampness to occur. However,
if the pores in the mortar line are made water repellent or blocked
then the water cannot rise since it cannot traverse the mortar beds
to do so.
BUT, bear in mind that even
if this new DPC was installed to perfection (unlikely) it will not deal
with residual damp above the new DPC or the inevitable 'salt' contaminants,
some of which suck moisture from the air.
Below - severe salts damage,
plaster will not recover.
This damage requires the
plaster to be hacked off completely.
Don't spend money yet - go
to our Diagnosis page and check your damp for yourself - you have nothing
to lose - click
here
For help
with how damp proof courses work call our experts on 01626 872886 .
The answer is usually:
That the salts will never
dry out, even when the moisture source is removed. Some of them absorb
moisture from the air - they are said to be 'hygroscopic'.
Replastering or rendering,
or Tanking with liquids over salts will always fail.
The solution is:
Lower the ground level, or
find and fix the leak(s), remove the indoor plaster to bare brick/stone,
apply Salt Neutraliser and then fit our Mesh Membrane - then replaster.
A Guaranteed result - guaranteed for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Misleading Statement 6 - amazingly
some 'specialists' offer this treatment!
A house that has
a plastic modern DPC might need chemical injection - no,
do not consider it
In many properties built
since the 1950s plastic damp proof courses (DPCs) have been installed,
incorporating plastic Damp Proof Membranes (DPMs) under the concrete
floors. These two plastic layers are usually linked, to form a continuous
plastic waterproof barrier to dampness from below the building. When
correctly installed they are 100% effective. They do not suddenly fail.
So never accept the option
of installing a Chemical Damp Proof Course in one of these buildings
- some simple investigation will almost certainly find a water leak,
usually internal, and these are usually covered by your Building Insurance.
Below - modern house, internal
water leak.
This problem in a modern
house NEVER requires to use of Tanking liquids, or the installation
of a new Damp Proof Course.
Before spending money check
your damp for yourself - we'll help you for free - click
here
For help
with types of damp proofing fluids and creams and where to use them
call our experts on 01626 872886 .
Misleading Statement 7 - builders
frequently build against walls - e.g. steps, decks.
You
can safely cover over a damp proof course -
no, this stops it from working properly
Care should be taken to ensure
that the damp-proof course is not 'bridged' by high external ground
levels, blocked cavities or debris piled against the wall; ground levels
should be lowered, cavities cleaned out or the area below the damp-proof
course might be 'tanked' internally if deemed necessary.
NOTE: Should minor bridging
of an effective damp-proof course occur, for example by moderately porous
plasterwork, then it is highly unlikely that the dampness would continue
to rise to its potential height. Problems of this type together with
defects in construction of the floor/wall junction usually manifest
themselves at the base of the wall.
Before spending money on
any form of damp proofing go to our Diagnosis page and check your damp
for yourself - there is nothing to lose - click
here
For help
with 'bridging' and blocked cavities call our experts on 01626 872886 .
Below - concrete yard level
too high relative to the damp proof course and Air Brick.
This will cause rain water
splash up to penetrate the wall causing damp inside.
The answer is:
Building Regulations stipulate
that ground levels should be at least 6 inches - 150mm - below the level
of the damp proof course to prevent the lateral penetration of (rainwater
splash up) dampness through the walls into the plaster and skirting
boards.
The solution is:
Ideally lower the ground
level, or, if that is not feasible, remove the indoor plaster and fit
our Mesh Membrane - then replaster. A Guaranteed result - guaranteed
for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Misleading Statement 8.
Internal walls
suffer from natural rising damp - no, only very,
very rarely
In reality, walls that have
no external outside face (said to be' internal' walls) are never likely
to need damp proof injection - because they are never likely to suffer
from natural rising damp.
Internal walls are most likely
to suffer from water leaks under the floor - mains water, sewage (but
note - there is unlikely to be a smell due to the filtering effect of
the soil), or central heating leaks. Check all these systems first -
see our Water Leak Testing section - click
here.
If the internal wall is a
shared wall (Party Wall) go next door and ask to see the matching area
- the source may not be under your house.
Your House Insurance may
cover the cost of repair - check your Insurance Excess and call the
Insurer to advise them of the probable leak. Take lots of dated photographs
as evidence.
Don't waste money on internal
walls - go to our Diagnosis page and check your damp for yourself -
save your money - click
here
For help
with types of damp proofing fluids and creams and where to use them
call our experts on 01626 872886 .
The answer is usually:
That the dampness was caused
by a water leak from a drain, a water main, a foul water pipe or a central
heating pipe. We will help you or your Builder/Plumber to find the cause.
The solution is:
Find and fix the leak(s),
remove the indoor plaster (if damaged) and fit our Mesh Membrane - then
replaster. A Guaranteed result - guaranteed for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Misleading Statement 9.
Cavity walls suffer
from natural rising damp - no, but they can be partially
blocked
Walls that have a cavity
(usually in older houses about 1 inch - 25mm wide, but up to 4 inches
- 100mm in modern houses) between the inner and outer bricks or blocks,
however small that cavity is, are never likely to need damp proof injection
- because they are never likely to suffer from natural rising damp -
they will have been built with a damp proof course. A clean cavity gives
good air flow between the walls and even if outside ground levels are
a little high ('bridging' due to rainwater splash up) the evaporation
inside the cavity will ensure that dampness does not travel through
the inner leaf to spoil decorations.
Cavity walls are most likely
to suffer from debris in the cavity or damp cavity insulation - see
our Article about cavity walls - click
here.
Your cavity may have been
filled with foam, polystyrene beads or Rockwool. Ask the Installer to
check for debris in the cavity - such debris allows moisture to move
from outside to inside, both above and below the damp proof course.
Rockwool may become soggy if enough dampness is trapped.
Ask for details of our Cavity
Cleaning Method.
For help
with types of damp proofing fluids and creams and where to use them
call our experts on 01626 872886 .
The answer is usually:
That the dampness was caused
by debris (mortar, sand, brick pieces, dirty wall ties, badly installed
cavity insulation) and then the moisture from raised external ground
levels or a water leak from a drain, a water main, a foul water pipe
can cross the cavity from the outside Otherwise the problem may be an
internal leak. . We will help you or your Builder/Plumber to find the
cause.
The solution is:
Clean out the cavity, lower
the ground level, or find and fix the leak(s), remove the indoor plaster
(if damaged) and fit our Mesh Membrane - then replaster. A Guaranteed
result - guaranteed for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Misleading Statement 10.
Sand and cement
render replastering, or Tanking, is best - sadly,
often it is not
Walls that have damp inside
for whatever reason, above the damp proof course, need good evaporation
on both sides to ensure that dampness does not climb the walls any further
by natural capillary action.
So called 'Tanking' a wall
with a liquid sealer (paint or cement slurry) or applying a dense Render
of sand and cement with 'waterproofer' will cut down or eliminate the
essential evaporation that dries a wall out (they only dry very slowly
- the Building Research Establishment (BRE) give an average of 0.5 to
1.0 inch (12.5mm to 25mm) of wall thickness per month, assuming that
both sides of the wall can breathe)
Tanking and rendering result
in the trapped moisture being driven higher over time - eventually the
moisture will appear above the level of the Tanking or render and may
show in the form of a 'salt band'.
The reason for the continued
rise of moisture is simple - the so called 'rising damp' was not natural
and the man made source has not been eliminated, so the new chemical
damp proof course is ineffective.
Salts bursting through paint
- Render or Tanking can drive this higher
Don't drive water up your
wall behind a waterproof layer - go to our Diagnosis page and check
your damp for yourself - save some money and time - click
here
For help
with types of damp proofing fluids and creams and where to use them
call our experts on 01626 872886 .
Floating
band of damp and salt emerging above renewed plaster on 'waterproofed'
render.
Note the perfect plaster
below the band - the problem has been concealed by the render backing
coat.
The answer is usually:
That the dampness was caused
by raised external ground levels or a water leak from a drain, a water
main, a foul water pipe or a central heating pipe. Using Tanking to
seal the wall simply causes the moisture to rise further. Even sand
and cement render may mask the problem, but eventually dampness will
appear above the renewed area. We will help you or your Builder/Plumber
to find the cause.
The solution is:
Lower the ground level, or
find and fix the leak(s), remove the indoor plaster (if damaged) and
fit our Mesh Membrane - then replaster. A Guaranteed result - guaranteed
for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Misleading Statement 11.
Modern, perfect
plastic DPCs cannot let moisture past - yes they
can, but not as a liquid
A 100% effective DPC in a
modern house is made of plastic and unlike a chemical damp proof course
should be a total barrier to water trying to move upwards in a wall
by capillary action. But when water is present below the plastic layer,
usually in modern buildings due to an internal water leak above the
floor membrane, it simply bypasses the damp proof layer by being sucked
up via the plaster and the back of the tightly fitted wooden skirting
board.
The same 'wicking' problem
occurs in older buildings where water dampens the soil or concrete under
a suspended floor - the water vapour rises in the air, condenses on
the walls and climbs the faces of the bricks or blocks, past the DPC
layer and into the wall via the plaster. The skirting boards also play
their part in 'wicking' and often rot as a consequence.
Some buildings have received
four new damp proof courses before anyone has realised that water under
the floor cannot be resisted by installing chemical or physical damp
proof courses in the walls.
Under suspended timber floors
the air bricks may cope with some of this excess moisture, but eventually
the moisture rots the timbers.
In flats with ' Beam and
Block' floors there is no floor membrane under the beams, so the vapour
condenses on the underneath of the concrete beams and blocks, soaking
in easily, giving rise to extremely cold floors and massive condensation
and mold problems in the ground floor flats.
For help
with types of damp proofing fluids and creams and where to use them
call our experts on 01626 872886 .
The answer is usually:
That the dampness was caused
by a water leak from a drain, a water main, a foul water pipe or a central
heating pipe under a suspended floor. The water vapour rising in the
sub floor space then condensed on the walls, joists or beams and was
subsequently 'sucked' up the wall, bypassing the edge of the plastic
damp proof course such damp is usually drawn up the back of the skirting
boards and into the skim finish plaster. On hacking off the plaster
the wall behind is often found to be bone dry. We will help you or your
Builder/Plumber to find the cause.
The solution is:
Find and fix the leak(s),
remove the indoor plaster (if damaged) and fit our Mesh Membrane if
the wall had become damp - then replaster. A Guaranteed result - guaranteed
for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Misleading Statement 12.
Old
buildings are likely to need a chemical damp proof course - no,
they are not
Traditional damp proof courses
(slate, stone, bitumen) do not break down!
So any property that has
one - say from about 1880 onwards - is unlikely to need injection.
Buried inside the wall structure
they do not significantly break down, so do not need replacement.
There is no evidence that
they fail in service and yet a whole industry has been created around
this idea.
Buildings constructed after
1950 are even less likely to need injection and those built from the
1960s onwards had plastic DPCs, so should never need a chemical version.
Send us photos of your property
for DPC identification - you probably need nothing -
click here
For help
with diagnosis call our experts on 01626 872886 .
Below - repaired plaster
over previous dampness,
This needs investigation
- buildings do not suffer sudden patches of damp proof course failure.
The answer is usually:
That the dampness was caused
by raised external ground levels or a water leak from a drain, a water
main, a foul water pipe or a central heating pipe. We will help you
or your Builder/Plumber to find the cause.
The solution is:
Lower the ground level, or
find and fix the leak(s), remove the indoor plaster (if damaged) and
fit our Mesh Membrane - then replaster. A Guaranteed result - guaranteed
for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Why not just give
in and have a new DPC - because it damages your
walls and wastes money
1. Analyse the problem
- see our page - click
here
2. Eliminate the faults
- usually water leaks or high ground levels.
3. Remove the affected
plaster and fit our Mesh Membrane - then replaster or plasterboard
- see our Membrane Shop - click
here
The Mesh Membrane is vented
so that air can pass behind it - it is NOT a Tanking System - it does
not seal the wall, so dampness is not driven higher.
For help
with types of damp proofing fluids and creams and where to use them
call our experts on 01626 872886 .
Below -
multiple inject attempts - some properties now have five damp proof
courses
What a waste of money.
Misleading Statement 13.
Rising damp can
be confirmed using a Damp Meter - no it cannot,
do not be fooled
Natural Rising damp is very,
very difficult to confirm. It requires the use of Laboratory Testing
and wall samples taken from multiple locations for each wall.
So when a local 'expert'
or 'specialist' using a so-called Damp Meter advises you that you have
Rising Damp and offers to inject and replaster the walls, ask them if
they have any qualifications and if they have read this book.
Quick
DIY Master Class in Dampness and Condensation - Click
here to buy the reprint.
This book was written by
Graham Coleman, who is a Lecturer in dampness and who has set many of
the examinations.
He confirms in his book that
a Damp Meter is not be be used to confirm that rising damp is present
and he also explains how proper tests can be performed.
In practice these tests are
rarely needed - simpler, less expensive options exist - but in 'legal'
Cases Graham is often involved as an Expert Witness.
Click
here to see our Dampness Guide for using a Damp Meter. - page 1
Click
here to see our Dampness Guide for using a Damp Meter. - page 2
Misleading Statement 14.
Cavity wall insulation
cannot cause damp inside the building - it can
and it does
Walls in older houses that
have cavities about 1 inch to 2 inches - 25mm to 50mm wide between
the inner and outer bricks or blocks should not be filled with anything
unless they have been checked in many places and are clear of debris
and bridging. A clean empty cavity gives good air flow between the
walls and even if outside ground levels are a little high ('bridging'
due to rainwater splash up) or there is some debris present the evaporation
inside the cavity will ensure that dampness does not travel through
the inner leaf to spoil decorations indoors.
See our Article about cavity
walls - click
here.
Your cavity may have been
filled with foam, polystyrene beads or Rockwool. Ask the Installer
to check for debris in the cavity - such debris allows moisture to
move from outside to inside, both above and below the damp proof course.
Rockwool may become soggy if enough dampness is trapped.
Ask for details of our
Cavity Cleaning Method.
For help
with types of damp proofing fluids and creams and where to use them
call our experts on 01626 872886 .
The answer is
usually:
That the dampness was caused
by debris (mortar, sand, brick pieces, dirty wall ties, badly installed
cavity insulation) and then the moisture from raised external ground
levels or a water leak from a drain, a water main, a foul water pipe
can cross the cavity from the outside Otherwise the problem may be
an internal leak. We will help you or your Builder/Plumber to find
the cause.
The solution
is:
Clean out the cavity, lower
the ground level, or find and fix the leak(s), remove the indoor plaster
(if damaged) and fit our Mesh Membrane - then replaster. A Guaranteed
result - guaranteed for 20 years.
Mesh Membrane -
click here
Property Care
Association
We are long term members
of the PCA - The Property Care Association - the professional body for
the Damp Proofing industry and our Dampness Surveyors have over 50 years
of experience between them.
If you prefer to use a Contractor,
rather than our free advice service, then go to the PCA Website where
you can find the nearest qualified specialist companies. They should
give you the same information that we provide. If in doubt E Mail their
Reports to us for checking, before spending any money.
Link for the PCA - click
here.
Want Help
choosing a Contractor - E: Mail us at help@propertyrepairsystems.co.uk
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Site written by: David
Moore
David Moore, B.A. (Hons.),
C.T.I.S., C.R.D.S. Technical Author
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