Old stone house, timber windows (fitted around 2001).
The windows were all fitted with minimal recess into the stone facings. There is a membrane around the perimeter of the windows and the gap between the timber and the wall has been rendered in (the edge of the membrane is visible). Someone has also put a clear silicone seal over the membrane edge.
So on most of the windows there is mould and damp appearing in the bottom corners on the plaster. Some condensation does appear on the inside on the d/g units, when it's cold outside. No condensation in the airgaps though.
Could it be a failure of the membrane/seal or just plain simple internal condensation? I did wonder if wind and rain could force moisture past any barriers.
The windows were all fitted with minimal recess into the stone facings. There is a membrane around the perimeter of the windows and the gap between the timber and the wall has been rendered in (the edge of the membrane is visible). Someone has also put a clear silicone seal over the membrane edge.
So on most of the windows there is mould and damp appearing in the bottom corners on the plaster. Some condensation does appear on the inside on the d/g units, when it's cold outside. No condensation in the airgaps though.
Could it be a failure of the membrane/seal or just plain simple internal condensation? I did wonder if wind and rain could force moisture past any barriers.