That tip regards cold spots because cracking outside allows cold air in is probably the most informative thing I've taken from these videos. I didn't realise a bit of cracking could cause such problems.
When my boy bought his house he had a problem with damp and mould. He had bought the house off an old boy who probably never opened the windows. I went round with him as he was worried about it. I found one part where the plaster was so wet and blown that it needed to be hacked off and redone. The reason for that was a dodgy repair on the roof which we had fixed. The rest of the house was as you pointed out was condensation, solid walls all round. I explained to him he needs to ventilate the house and get a change of air, even if only for an hour a day to let the house breath. Three months later, no more damp patches, no more mould, problem solved. People don’t realise how much moisture they’re putting into their house just by normal living. If there’s no airflow, it hits the cold surface and just condenses. I recon at least 60 or 70% of damp problems I’ve come across are because people don’t have any air changes in their properties. Great video by the way.
I think that too with y house, the lady who owned it before us lived there alone for about 16 years but wasn’t living in it most of the time, so every opportunity I have all the windows open, even the loft hatch. I’m clearing and fixing the guttering and drainage pipes and hop that will allow it to dry out too.
nailed it 100% and thats coming from me who owns a solid brick victorian house! its 100% about air exchange, old houses get sealed up and the wet air doesnt get out. thats it.
I viewed a house and got the owner on the phone to asked about penetrating damp where a new roof met the kitchen. He told me he ‘sorted it’ every few years by firstly sealing outside the house then using mould remover on the eternal black mould. I didn’t return the house was suffocating!
Defo condensation, ventilation is needed is old homes, just crack the windows on the trickle vents or on the latch for an hour per day, wood burner helped massively in my old house, nice dry air. heating the condensation air with central heating creates mold and damp.
In my experience after several years of playing around and trying to solve damp issues in my own house (making similar mistakes) the most overlooked cause of damn is condensation - and especially so in older homes with solid walls. When you see a wet wall after it's been raining it's easy to assume the cause must be rising damp or penetrating damp, but in my experience it rarely ever is. The damp appears when it's raining because the extra humidity is causing water to condensate on the wall. Even what most people think is rising damp I suspect is often just related to the bottom of the wall being cold and therefore condensing. Sam, to your point on calling a professional out, not all damp experts are as good as you. My home has had so many "damp experts" came around and install DPCs to try to prevent damp over the years... And obviously it never works because the cause isn't rising damp. If you own an old property unless you can get someone in you trust you'll often need to learn about this stuff yourself because most experts are a waste of time and a waste of money.
Yes it’s all down to who is diagnosing the problem , there are surveyors who have never actually done the work or installed any of the systems they are recommending so they don’t know there suitability. If you find a good damp surveyor hang on to them and tell others about them too
Interesting video. Just bought a 1900 terraced house with damp issues in front room. So far, I have discovered the following: water peeing out of broken gutter (fixed), slate off roof (fixed), lower cavity (only 1/2 inch wide) blocked, wooden floors replaced with concrete at some point, but air bricks left in cuasing draught behind skirtings (now bricked up,) concrete floor not sealed to wall properly, causing cold draughts from those redundant air bricks, slate damp course behind skirting bridged with render, ground around front of house built up, half way over an airbrick at one point, (now lowered and made into gravel trench.) Also putting some damp rods in as slate damp course looks fragile. Can't think why there was damp on walls :) Time will tell...
He's going for the world record on how many barriers coats you can you apply to a wall. Bet Peter would loose his shit doing this to a historic property.
I’ve recently bought a house built in the mid to late 1800’s and the rainwater drains must have been blocked for over 20 years, the ground around the house is very wet. The house has been drowning in rainwater!
Hello Sam, greetings from Bulgaria! I have a problem with moisture on the walls of basement rooms in a house. The rooms on the first floor of the house are located one meter below the ground surface. Wet spots form at the base of the walls and at their corners (but only on the outer walls), which lead to mold. Years ago, when one of the rooms was intensively heated, there was no problem with moisture and mold. Which makes me think that penetrating moisture may not be entirely the problem. Could it be condensed moisture on the cold parts of the wall? I'm looking for the cause and I'm confused. I'm open to opinions! Thanks!
A soildwall house im working on, where the plasterer has filled Bonding where the sparky chased out his wires, the bonding only always feels and looks damp, from the light switch to the ciling, the rest of the new skim if sound. What you recone?
Hi Sam, very informative video and makes me wonder about an issue in my rental property. I’ve had condensation issues identified by three separate companies but the council (because tenants reported me🙄) think it’s rising damp because there’s a tide mark on the wallpaper in one corner. It’s an external corner wall in a 1964 bungalow with an un-bridged DPC. Could a tide mark actually be caused by condensation or is rising damp a real possibility?
You don’t seem to like Pete ward ? Does that mean for old solid wall buildings you don’t recommend lime products ? Having renovated 1 flat 135 yr old & 2 houses both 200 yrs old over a 12 yr period using lime from ty Mawr I cannot believe that new methods are even allowed on these buildings they need to be ventilated & to breath . Using masonary paint ,injection damp course ,cement ,gypsum is not the answer. No I am not Pete wards son but his methods work this will not on old buildings.
I have no feeling either way for Peter and iv nothing against lime plasters used correctly, the issue is that modern methods were brought in for a reason and that is for speed and affordability. Not everyone has the time and money to be using traditional techniques.
That tip regards cold spots because cracking outside allows cold air in is probably the most informative thing I've taken from these videos. I didn't realise a bit of cracking could cause such problems.
Im glad you are getting some value 👍
When my boy bought his house he had a problem with damp and mould. He had bought the house off an old boy who probably never opened the windows. I went round with him as he was worried about it. I found one part where the plaster was so wet and blown that it needed to be hacked off and redone. The reason for that was a dodgy repair on the roof which we had fixed. The rest of the house was as you pointed out was condensation, solid walls all round. I explained to him he needs to ventilate the house and get a change of air, even if only for an hour a day to let the house breath. Three months later, no more damp patches, no more mould, problem solved. People don’t realise how much moisture they’re putting into their house just by normal living. If there’s no airflow, it hits the cold surface and just condenses. I recon at least 60 or 70% of damp problems I’ve come across are because people don’t have any air changes in their properties. Great video by the way.
I think that too with y house, the lady who owned it before us lived there alone for about 16 years but wasn’t living in it most of the time, so every opportunity I have all the windows open, even the loft hatch. I’m clearing and fixing the guttering and drainage pipes and hop that will allow it to dry out too.
nailed it 100% and thats coming from me who owns a solid brick victorian house! its 100% about air exchange, old houses get sealed up and the wet air doesnt get out. thats it.
I viewed a house and got the owner on the phone to asked about penetrating damp where a new roof met the kitchen. He told me he ‘sorted it’ every few years by firstly sealing outside the house then using mould remover on the eternal black mould. I didn’t return the house was suffocating!
Sorry just couldn't stop looking at the position of the radiator. Sure there's a reason.👍
I was thinking the same ! What's with the rad positioning ?
Put t'radiata like on t'wall like
got me thinking . run out o pipe lad ....
Better than being behind furniture? Get the more of the radiation into the room is my guess
The truth is… he’s sat in the sub floor, making sure there’s adequate ventilation.
Defo condensation, ventilation is needed is old homes, just crack the windows on the trickle vents or on the latch for an hour per day, wood burner helped massively in my old house, nice dry air. heating the condensation air with central heating creates mold and damp.
Thanks for the tips!
In my experience after several years of playing around and trying to solve damp issues in my own house (making similar mistakes) the most overlooked cause of damn is condensation - and especially so in older homes with solid walls. When you see a wet wall after it's been raining it's easy to assume the cause must be rising damp or penetrating damp, but in my experience it rarely ever is. The damp appears when it's raining because the extra humidity is causing water to condensate on the wall. Even what most people think is rising damp I suspect is often just related to the bottom of the wall being cold and therefore condensing.
Sam, to your point on calling a professional out, not all damp experts are as good as you. My home has had so many "damp experts" came around and install DPCs to try to prevent damp over the years... And obviously it never works because the cause isn't rising damp. If you own an old property unless you can get someone in you trust you'll often need to learn about this stuff yourself because most experts are a waste of time and a waste of money.
Yes it’s all down to who is diagnosing the problem , there are surveyors who have never actually done the work or installed any of the systems they are recommending so they don’t know there suitability. If you find a good damp surveyor hang on to them and tell others about them too
Interesting video. Just bought a 1900 terraced house with damp issues in front room. So far, I have discovered the following: water peeing out of broken gutter (fixed), slate off roof (fixed), lower cavity (only 1/2 inch wide) blocked, wooden floors replaced with concrete at some point, but air bricks left in cuasing draught behind skirtings (now bricked up,) concrete floor not sealed to wall properly, causing cold draughts from those redundant air bricks, slate damp course behind skirting bridged with render, ground around front of house built up, half way over an airbrick at one point, (now lowered and made into gravel trench.) Also putting some damp rods in as slate damp course looks fragile. Can't think why there was damp on walls :) Time will tell...
Good luck with the Reno 👍
17:35. It’s that shit your body physically reacts. Love it. Great video. Cheers ❤
He's going for the world record on how many barriers coats you can you apply to a wall. Bet Peter would loose his shit doing this to a historic property.
Peter would explode 💥
I’ve recently bought a house built in the mid to late 1800’s and the rainwater drains must have been blocked for over 20 years, the ground around the house is very wet. The house has been drowning in rainwater!
Yes it’s a common problem
Hello Sam, greetings from Bulgaria!
I have a problem with moisture on the walls of basement rooms in a house.
The rooms on the first floor of the house are located one meter below the ground surface.
Wet spots form at the base of the walls and at their corners (but only on the outer walls), which lead to mold.
Years ago, when one of the rooms was intensively heated, there was no problem with moisture and mold.
Which makes me think that penetrating moisture may not be entirely the problem.
Could it be condensed moisture on the cold parts of the wall?
I'm looking for the cause and I'm confused.
I'm open to opinions!
Thanks!
Unfortunately without seeing it I couldn’t really say.
A soildwall house im working on, where the plasterer has filled Bonding where the sparky chased out his wires, the bonding only always feels and looks damp, from the light switch to the ciling, the rest of the new skim if sound. What you recone?
Could be on damp masonry , it will react with any salts
Hi Sam, very informative video and makes me wonder about an issue in my rental property. I’ve had condensation issues identified by three separate companies but the council (because tenants reported me🙄) think it’s rising damp because there’s a tide mark on the wallpaper in one corner. It’s an external corner wall in a 1964 bungalow with an un-bridged DPC. Could a tide mark actually be caused by condensation or is rising damp a real possibility?
I saw the picture and I wouldn’t be sure without a site visit
When you say Express Damp Proofing/boarding, is that also called Dry Lining/high density insulation board?
No Dan It’s a system invented by Safeguard Europe, I sell a course on how to do it on dampsam.com
Qualified and competent surveyor… another damp wally
Better than you ☝️
Thanks Sam, you gave me a good laugh! 😁I'd watched Sion's video before and thought it was dodgy, thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it
Class work Sam...
"alright Pete". I even know who youre talking about 😂😂
Great vid... Kind of want to follow the guy now for more tanking solutions 😂
Hi damp Sam could you help me, I’ve got 1 damp wall in my ground floor Victorian flat here are some pictures
Thanks, am going to try the key scratch test on the Damp patches to see if dry underneath with pink or dark colour.
Awsome
Enjoy’t rest of ya film.. love that little website ad❤
Hia Sam love you vidoes, we are manchester, i have some issues with damp, but my floor joists are wet, can give some advice?
Yes if you send videos and pictures to our WhatsApp 07973748566 along with your name address and an explanation I’ll have a look 👍
Thank you i would really appreciate it, ill send it tomorrow
very good work sam !
Many thanks!
@@dampsam Can you use tanking slurry on damp concrete?
Good lad sam love it
It’s definitely Shaun, Shawn, Sean or Sion, definitely Welsh
Hey I would like to talk to you
It seams you have some knowledge I need
Hi Pete you can contact me via dampsam@thedampshow.co.uk
Making fun of someone’s name, mate? All you got?
Yes Greggs love your pasties lad 😆
Cracking video 😂
Scary thing is people will copy his technique 😮😮
You don’t seem to like Pete ward ?
Does that mean for old solid wall buildings you don’t recommend lime products ?
Having renovated 1 flat 135 yr old
& 2 houses both 200 yrs old over a 12 yr period using lime from ty Mawr I cannot believe that new methods are even allowed on these buildings they need to be ventilated & to breath .
Using masonary paint ,injection damp course ,cement ,gypsum is not the answer.
No I am not Pete wards son but his methods work this will not on old buildings.
I have no feeling either way for Peter and iv nothing against lime plasters used correctly, the issue is that modern methods were brought in for a reason and that is for speed and affordability. Not everyone has the time and money to be using traditional techniques.
Pete hahaha!
Mate - try and be more positive? Better for you, better for everyone
Try not watching or commenting better for everyone 🤷🏻♂️
😂❤😆