Hello,
Grateful for any help with this. We have this old Oriel window in an 1830s property which has been retrofitted with Iroko double glazed units. It has a triangle shaped block of Kingspan built into the underside and the inside of the projecting platform has also been insulated as it was incredibly drafty.
There are now no drafts at all. However, on colder days, the wood along the bottoms of the window casements are saturated with condensation and prone to mould build-up. The bottoms of the glazed areas do have a touch of condensation but that's to be expected.
What we can't figure out is why the wood would get so cold as to cause such huge quantities of condensation there. The casements have been sealed outside around their edges. The paintwork was freshly re-decorated this past summer. Have we missed something?
Thanks all in anticipation.
Grateful for any help with this. We have this old Oriel window in an 1830s property which has been retrofitted with Iroko double glazed units. It has a triangle shaped block of Kingspan built into the underside and the inside of the projecting platform has also been insulated as it was incredibly drafty.
There are now no drafts at all. However, on colder days, the wood along the bottoms of the window casements are saturated with condensation and prone to mould build-up. The bottoms of the glazed areas do have a touch of condensation but that's to be expected.
What we can't figure out is why the wood would get so cold as to cause such huge quantities of condensation there. The casements have been sealed outside around their edges. The paintwork was freshly re-decorated this past summer. Have we missed something?
Thanks all in anticipation.