Burning natural gas in a fireplace also produces moisture - about 1.6kg of H2O per cubic meter of methane consumed.
Which will go straight up the flue/chimney.
Burning natural gas in a fireplace also produces moisture - about 1.6kg of H2O per cubic meter of methane consumed.
Yes the seals had gone and the units were blownMakes you wonder why you changed the windows then, maybe the old ones were draughty?
I was going to do that but this morning the condensation inside the glazing that I'd photographed had gone! Maybe cos the room's been warmer as i had the heating on last night as it was so cold. I know I hadn't imagined it as I'd taken the photo but I can't get them back when there's nothing to see so not sure what to do.Get in installers back. The glass needs changing.
but I can't get them back when there's nothing to see so not sure what to do
Leave the heating on today and see if condensation forms.I was going to do that but this morning the condensation inside the glazing that I'd photographed had gone! Maybe cos the room's been warmer as i had the heating on last night as it was so cold. I know I hadn't imagined it as I'd taken the photo but I can't get them back when there's nothing to see so not sure what to do.
On a cold day, don't heat your home and open the backdoor with the offended windows closed, I bet your issue will return.
the backdoor while the windows remain closed you'll be introducing a drastic temperature difference. The cold outdoor air will enter the property and depending on the temperature, this will lower the indoor temperature significantly with the heating off and the inside air cooling down, the glass can become colder than the air inside. As the air cools and the humidity in the air remains the same, the air near the window can drop to its dew point, causing condensation to form on the inner glass surface. I've seen this a lot of times in my house.Why/how would it? The condensation on indoor surfaces, window, if the surface is colder than the air temperature.
Condensation only forms on the outer pane, when it has been cold overnight, and the temperature outdoors rises suddenly.
the backdoor while the windows remain closed you'll be introducing a drastic temperature difference. The cold outdoor air will enter the property and depending on the temperature, this will lower the indoor temperature significantly with the heating off and the inside air cooling down, the glass can become colder than the air inside. As the air cools and the humidity in the air remains the same, the air near the window can drop to its dew point, causing condensation to form on the inner glass surface. I've seen this a lot of times in my house.
As seems usual lately I'm late to the party lol...I don't seem to get notifications when I'm tagged for some reason.Likely a manufacturing fault.
To answer some of your other questions re the vacuum, it's very very rare that units have a vacuum, they used to exist way back but as far as I'm aware 99.9% are not nowadays, @ronniecabers is your man, a unit manufacturer so he'll be better placed to answer that.
Argon, yes whilst brilliant when it's in the unit but what DG salesman won't tell you is that by around 4 to 5 years it's all leaked out anyway, whilst technically it's a sealed unit the seal is still permeable, argon WILL deep through it, again maybe Ronnie can confirm this
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