GREAT VIDEO THANKS, MY FRONT OF THE HOUSE IS APPROX OVER 100YEARS OLD. ANY IDEAS HOW MEASURE THICKENSS AND DEPTH I NEED TO GO IN. DUE TO STONE WALLS, BE4LOW MY FRONT ROOM WINDOW, WITHOUT DRILLING STRAIGHT THROUGH? THANKS
Drainage problem. We took out the stones decorative in the drainage line were the water stocks. And will see in the winter if the problem still excess...
sorry I've been busy. Dry rod tool 12mm dia. from Amazon. I am waiting for the winter and will see if the owner called me about the result. I treat that wall since May 2022. at the moment no return calls yet. I will let you know this winter.
That was May and a Spring. There is no update yet from the owner. I am waiting this winter and will see if it is working. If I never heard from my client meaning it's working. I will update you this winter
A couple of things....I thought the drilling had to be done in the mortar and not the brick work? Why was the skirting inside the house not taken off as it will probably be wet/damp and damaged, the same goes for the plasterwork inside the house. With all due respect it all looks a bit bodged to me........
mortar! The job time scale are limited, avoid decorating for the low budget. Outside drilling is the best option. The result after the winter ALL DRY.....
if it's a standard victorian wall of 9" (2 courses of brick) how long did you cut the dryrods? that's important i think? i've read, you should allow at least 1 inch each side for the chemical to leak into the mortar
GREAT VIDEO THANKS, MY FRONT OF THE HOUSE IS APPROX OVER 100YEARS OLD. ANY IDEAS HOW MEASURE THICKENSS AND DEPTH I NEED TO GO IN. DUE TO STONE WALLS, BE4LOW MY FRONT ROOM WINDOW, WITHOUT DRILLING STRAIGHT THROUGH? THANKS
Use 12mm drill bit, 210mm depth.
Thank you very much appreciate it @@handymanlondon
Can you render over the dryzone rods with sand and cement?
Thanks for the video. Do you know what was the cause of the damp?
Drainage problem. We took out the stones decorative in the drainage line were the water stocks. And will see in the winter if the problem still excess...
Where we. Will get this rod & filler?
You can get on Amazon more cheaper.
Great video, what is the tool you used to clear the mortar from the holes? How effective is this system for stopping the damp issue?
It's a dry rod tool, can be bought on ebay
sorry I've been busy. Dry rod tool 12mm dia. from Amazon. I am waiting for the winter and will see if the owner called me about the result. I treat that wall since May 2022. at the moment no return calls yet. I will let you know this winter.
@@handymanlondon Thank you for your help. I'm going to try the same system for an outhouse with rising damp.
After the winter the result are ALL DRY. Fantastic!
Any updates how it's held up 3 months later? I know weather has been very dry so probably not best time to see results
That was May and a Spring. There is no update yet from the owner. I am waiting this winter and will see if it is working. If I never heard from my client meaning it's working. I will update you this winter
Hey results after the winter are ALL DRY.
Those are designed to be put into the mortar joints you cannot have any idea where most of them holes are going.
Anyone out there do not put the rods in without gloves, the rods will seriously dry your hands out.
A couple of things....I thought the drilling had to be done in the mortar and not the brick work? Why was the skirting inside the house not taken off as it will probably be wet/damp and damaged, the same goes for the plasterwork inside the house. With all due respect it all looks a bit bodged to me........
mortar! The job time scale are limited, avoid decorating for the low budget. Outside drilling is the best option. The result after the winter ALL DRY.....
Be helpful to have a follow up video to see how things are going there.
Yes, I wish I could come back to the house and see what happen. But at the moment there is no calls from them. I'm still waiting for them.
After the winter, ALL DRY and FANTASTIC
@@handymanlondon hey thanks mate, good to hear
We need to see the results?
Sorry, the owner said after the winter, the result are ALL DRY. Fantastic!
If thats sandstone your drilling though its completely wrong. Needs to be 150 mm above ground level and into a mortar course.
if it's a standard victorian wall of 9" (2 courses of brick) how long did you cut the dryrods? that's important i think? i've read, you should allow at least 1 inch each side for the chemical to leak into the mortar
Irs 5mm each side mate.