I’ve put ardex NA and DPM1c on floors like that over the years with no failures that I know about. But as I tell the clients it’s always a risk and to dig up an new subfloor is the best way.
if it’s part concrete and part suspended , then theyve probably just concreted the rotten bits in over the years. this prevents effective ventilation under the house and exacerbates rising damp .
if it was my house, i’d remove the concrete room by room ,fit 6” wall plates and reinstate the original suspended floor using joist hangers . also inject a chemical dpc in the mortar bed at floor level. you can lose the broken up concrete underneath. cheaper , cleaner and allows the ventilation and movement that the build of your house intended.
if it's wet under there, the cause is often a plumbing leak. Do you have a water meter? Or sharp ears?
Chemical injections do not add ventilation, or cure leaks, or repair building defects.
a common sense suggestion to stop rising damp. nothing else.if it's wet under there, the cause is often a plumbing leak. Do you have a water meter? Or sharp ears?
Chemical injections do not add ventilation, or cure leaks, or repair building defects.
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