We live in Florida and dont have a basement and when it rains it seems water is coming into our bathroom underneath thr tiles. The bathroom is right on the corner of the exterior of the front of the house.
Im not suprised its leaking, doesnt look like the walls have any sort of membrane or perimeter drainage, plus wood is stud work is such a bad idea in basements it rots over time, use metal stud partition
This all depends on how bad the water proofing is compromised. Water can migrate under ground 20 feet away. It’s always best practice to really pin point where the source of leak.
So if water is traveling from the planter bed at street level, under the driveway, and finally into the basement, then would stopping the problem at the source, which I typically believe to be the best solution, still be the preferred solution? Maybe raise the level of the dirt to slightly higher than the sidewalk, compact added dirt like mad, and finally sloping towards the street so all rainwater flows to the sidewalk. Alternately pull out the flowerbed and replace with either concrete or a nice paver area also sloped toward the street. If you instead fix the problem at the other end by using a sump pump, than how can you be certain more water is traveling to other parts of the house that you don't see yet.
absolutely! This is why it's important to first pinpoint the source. We are seeing too many assumptions being made and thousands of dollars being spent to waterproof what people think is the cause, then the rain comes and floods out the basement,
good luck with that, this is what I googled "This is a tough case for a homeowner to be in, because this situation is generally not covered. After a period of heavy rain, the ground can become saturated with water, and that water can seep through the ground into your basement. Homeowners insurance companies do not consider this a coverable calamity. Flood insurance also won't cover it unless the seepage is directly related to a flood in the area. The best defense against this disaster is to make sure the foundation of your home is solid and up to date on all inspections."
my basement has been leaking since December, ruined all my new floor and my window well was all re done professionally within the last month still noticing water on my floor and damage on my drywall by the floor thats under my window
How was this problem fixed?
A cliffhanger for the ages.
Well damn was expecting to show how to fix, thanks
great you found it..now how did you fix it?
We excavated down and waterproofed concrete surfaces.
@Twin Home Experts wow, would have been nice to see
Come ooooon! How did you fix it??
This is good stuff man! You got a subscriber.
Thanks you so much! We appreciate having people like you on our channel.
We live in Florida and dont have a basement and when it rains it seems water is coming into our bathroom underneath thr tiles. The bathroom is right on the corner of the exterior of the front of the house.
Im not suprised its leaking, doesnt look like the walls have any sort of membrane or perimeter drainage, plus wood is stud work is such a bad idea in basements it rots over time, use metal stud partition
Great advice!! It’s not easy finding the leak sometimes. Will pouring concrete over the flowerbed stop the water from leaking into the basement?
This all depends on how bad the water proofing is compromised. Water can migrate under ground 20 feet away. It’s always best practice to really pin point where the source of leak.
Who do you call to diagnose these problems?
Some good advice, don't wear headphones or else you will be going to the hospital after this video
you guys are awesome
Where is the video showing the fix??
Not surprised it was the flower bed. It changed the way the water was supposed to drain to the street.
Good video. Leak can be far from actual water buildup
Where's the link to your video on how to fix the found leak?
Will have to get that done. Thanks
@@TwinHomeExperts yeah and you never did that video instead you chasing rats nothing else..............
So if water is traveling from the planter bed at street level, under the driveway, and finally into the basement, then would stopping the problem at the source, which I typically believe to be the best solution, still be the preferred solution?
Maybe raise the level of the dirt to slightly higher than the sidewalk, compact added dirt like mad, and finally sloping towards the street so all rainwater flows to the sidewalk. Alternately pull out the flowerbed and replace with either concrete or a nice paver area also sloped toward the street. If you instead fix the problem at the other end by using a sump pump, than how can you be certain more water is traveling to other parts of the house that you don't see yet.
absolutely! This is why it's important to first pinpoint the source. We are seeing too many assumptions being made and thousands of dollars being spent to waterproof what people think is the cause, then the rain comes and floods out the basement,
we also have same problem in our shop in London. do yo any companies who do good job to block the leaks
some good advice
How about how to fix it
Does this count as flood damage when making a claim
good luck with that, this is what I googled "This is a tough case for a homeowner to be in, because this situation is generally not covered. After a period of heavy rain, the ground can become saturated with water, and that water can seep through the ground into your basement. Homeowners insurance companies do not consider this a coverable calamity.
Flood insurance also won't cover it unless the seepage is directly related to a flood in the area. The best defense against this disaster is to make sure the foundation of your home is solid and up to date on all inspections."
That’s how my leak was too, it was traveling beneath a patio same way would have never thought to look.
Thanks job weldone
What company can I call to do this locally
I would look up structure leak detection companies near me or contact a local leak detection company that may have a resource. What town are you in?
You can do a smoke test, to find the evaporation leak 😉
This always depends on the substrates were dealing with. GREAT QUESTION!
my basement has been leaking since December, ruined all my new floor and my window well was all re done professionally within the last month still noticing water on my floor and damage on my drywall by the floor thats under my window
this is so bad this you fixed it after 2 years now?
I'm not convinced.
plenty of other vids out there. Good luck
@@TwinHomeExperts dude finding the leak is the easy part. Fixing it is where we need help.
I am from India and yet watch all the videos as I am someone who is suffering with rain water leakage pathetically
Sorry to hear your having major leak issues. Wish we can help.
what the hell.....?? you didnt find the leak !! what a joke....and you had the gall to ask me to hit the subsc. No way.
That was your house?