JohnnyB Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Yesterday I was drilling holes in the ceiling for the MVHR vent points and found there is quite a bit of moisture trapped just below the vapour barrier, between the plasterboard and VB. I realise this is what the VB is supposed to do but I'm wondering if seeing moisture trapped and the back of the PB being damp is normal a few weeks after the plaster was put on and the ceiling looks dry inside? The plasterers have only just finished but the upstairs ceilings were plastered a few weeks ago. I was intending to put the first layer of loft roll down this weekend and put the MVHR pipes in to help dry the house out but now I have seen the moisture I'm wondering if this is normal and will dry out from inside the house as the plaster dries fully, or if I need to leave the loft roll wrapped up for now and possibly split the VB in areas to let it dry out and then tape up the splits with airtight tape once it is dry? I have used Steico Multimembra5 above most of the ceilings which I believe should let some moisture through slowly, but above the bathrooms I used a green plastic VB from the local builders merchant. The plaster on the ceilings is onecoat at about 8mm thick, not multifinish, and that must mean more moisture in the plaster than normal.
JohnMo Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago If you have just plastered that carries huge amounts of water. Plus if you don't have effective ventilation... Maybe get a dehumidifier until your ventilation is up and running (after decorating) 37 minutes ago, JohnnyB said: possibly split the VB in areas to let it dry out and then tape up the splits with airtight tape once it is dry? Your vapour barrier is there to stop water vapour going into the structure and it rotting, why would you encourage water vapour to go there? NO. I would continue with the insulation and MVHR install.
Crofter Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago You're best to crack on with the loft insulation, this will help prevent the water from condensing where it meets the cold air of the loft.
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