Hi,
We are renovating a 1930's detached house with solid 9" brick walls. Our goal is to make this house as good as it can be and then stay here for a long time.
We intend to make sure that the house is as well insulated as possible and on the west side of the house which doesn't get much sunlight the plan is to put studding against the external wall and insulate with something like SF40 SuperFoil.
We had a timber and damp survey carried out and it identified some damp issues along the wall which we want to insulate, and in one corner of the room the plaster did come off in big chunks, higher up it was pretty well fixed. All the plaster is now off the whole wall and we didin't want to lose room space with the studding.
I need to treat the damp that is visible, even if it is not very serious yet and I want to make sure that we never have any damp issues in the future as we are "going to town" on this house. For the sake of £100 and a bit of time I intend to put a silicone injection DPC 1 course above the the slate DPC which is already there, along the entire length of the house, so that in 15 - 20 years eventually when the slate breaks down we don't have a big problem. Before anyone tells me I know this is "belt and braces", but it's a great house and at the moment we are taking all the plaster off walls and ceilings in some rooms, rewiring, new heating, extension etc, etc. so a bit of DPC is no big deal.
Questions;
1. Should I drill the holes in the mortar course or in the bricks themselves (different sites give different advice)?
2. Is there any guide to how long/how much to inject?
3. Is there any danger to the existing slate course doing this?
4. I plan to inject the course above the existing slate DPC, is this OK or should I try for the course below the existing slate DPC?
5. Am i right in thinking that the new type of "creams" won't work as they require a fair bit of moisture in the brick to be activated?
Thanks for your help. Marco
We are renovating a 1930's detached house with solid 9" brick walls. Our goal is to make this house as good as it can be and then stay here for a long time.
We intend to make sure that the house is as well insulated as possible and on the west side of the house which doesn't get much sunlight the plan is to put studding against the external wall and insulate with something like SF40 SuperFoil.
We had a timber and damp survey carried out and it identified some damp issues along the wall which we want to insulate, and in one corner of the room the plaster did come off in big chunks, higher up it was pretty well fixed. All the plaster is now off the whole wall and we didin't want to lose room space with the studding.
I need to treat the damp that is visible, even if it is not very serious yet and I want to make sure that we never have any damp issues in the future as we are "going to town" on this house. For the sake of £100 and a bit of time I intend to put a silicone injection DPC 1 course above the the slate DPC which is already there, along the entire length of the house, so that in 15 - 20 years eventually when the slate breaks down we don't have a big problem. Before anyone tells me I know this is "belt and braces", but it's a great house and at the moment we are taking all the plaster off walls and ceilings in some rooms, rewiring, new heating, extension etc, etc. so a bit of DPC is no big deal.
Questions;
1. Should I drill the holes in the mortar course or in the bricks themselves (different sites give different advice)?
2. Is there any guide to how long/how much to inject?
3. Is there any danger to the existing slate course doing this?
4. I plan to inject the course above the existing slate DPC, is this OK or should I try for the course below the existing slate DPC?
5. Am i right in thinking that the new type of "creams" won't work as they require a fair bit of moisture in the brick to be activated?
Thanks for your help. Marco