thanks for the quick response
so do you mean the wet patch is on the wall below where all those pipes are?
And a shed with no rainwater guttters?
If water is not coming from there, it will be a surprise.
Looking at it from the outside, which part is wettest?
As for the floor, I see that the hearth area, and the solid floors, are wet.
The hearth is likely to be wet because, beneath the hearthstone is a mass of infill rubble, going down to the ground, with no dampcourse, which is very absorbent.
If the ground beneath the house is wet, it would also soak into the solid floors.
Unless the house was built on wet ground, I still hold to the view that there is a plumbing or drain leak.
Water pipes often leak after a hundred years.
Clay drainage always has cracks and leaks.
It's not condensation,
Silicone injections will not repair the defect that is the source of water, neither will fancy plaster.
so do you mean the wet patch is on the wall below where all those pipes are?
And a shed with no rainwater guttters?
If water is not coming from there, it will be a surprise.
Looking at it from the outside, which part is wettest?
As for the floor, I see that the hearth area, and the solid floors, are wet.
The hearth is likely to be wet because, beneath the hearthstone is a mass of infill rubble, going down to the ground, with no dampcourse, which is very absorbent.
If the ground beneath the house is wet, it would also soak into the solid floors.
Unless the house was built on wet ground, I still hold to the view that there is a plumbing or drain leak.
Water pipes often leak after a hundred years.
Clay drainage always has cracks and leaks.
It's not condensation,
Silicone injections will not repair the defect that is the source of water, neither will fancy plaster.