In October I had the roof replaced on my victorian terraced house (new breathable felt, batons and synthetic slates). I have a small loft conversion set up with dwarf walls with crawl spaces into the attic space at the front and rear of the house. This was in place before the new roof was fitted.
At the rear of the house, I am experiencing massive amounts of condensation forming on the underneath of the felt but at the front of the house there is no problem. On inspection I noticed that Tyvek has been used at the front of the house but at the rear a felt with a green face and white back has been used, I cant find a brand name on it although it looks to be same kind of material as Tyvek. Is it possible this could be a non breathing felt? Are there felts out there that look like they could be breathable felts but are not?
The rear section of the house is above an unused bedroom, the radiator is switched off and the trickle vent on the window is always open, so I dont think any additional moisture/vapour from bleow should be an issue. Although I should mention that this side of the house gets zero sunlight at the moment and is normally covered in frost due to the current weather!
I have pulled insulation back from the eaves in order to try and get some criculation going but my understanding was that ventilation is not much of a concern if you have a breathable membrane??
Please help! Any answers to my questions, thoughts or comments will be gratefully received...I want to cover all angles before I go back to roofer!
Thanks.
At the rear of the house, I am experiencing massive amounts of condensation forming on the underneath of the felt but at the front of the house there is no problem. On inspection I noticed that Tyvek has been used at the front of the house but at the rear a felt with a green face and white back has been used, I cant find a brand name on it although it looks to be same kind of material as Tyvek. Is it possible this could be a non breathing felt? Are there felts out there that look like they could be breathable felts but are not?
The rear section of the house is above an unused bedroom, the radiator is switched off and the trickle vent on the window is always open, so I dont think any additional moisture/vapour from bleow should be an issue. Although I should mention that this side of the house gets zero sunlight at the moment and is normally covered in frost due to the current weather!
I have pulled insulation back from the eaves in order to try and get some criculation going but my understanding was that ventilation is not much of a concern if you have a breathable membrane??
Please help! Any answers to my questions, thoughts or comments will be gratefully received...I want to cover all angles before I go back to roofer!
Thanks.