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Just now, pocster said:

Actually I might bring a hair dryer tomorrow and completely dry out the water tracks . Easier then to see if still leaking 

 

And you could look at doing a new style for your own lovely locks!

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Couldn’t wait so went and bought an electric fan heater . Stuck it on a ladder and pointed it at the ceiling .

Most of it dried up after a few hours .

Meant to rain later so tomorrow i’ll see .... ?

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On 28/02/2019 at 15:31, pocster said:

Not at the site. But took this photo because the gate hinges will need moving up 50mm

 

What I do notice where the permatec goes vertical up the stone work it does look like it's fully bonded - so *perhaps* flashing isn't required !

image1.jpeg

 

So what happened to this gate and why does it need to be 50mm higher?

 

And is this problem dealt with, now?

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19 minutes ago, Ferdinand said:

 

So what happened to this gate and why does it need to be 50mm higher?

 

And is this problem dealt with, now?

Because the pavers etc. will be higher by 50mm . Gate won’t clear them when open . Least of my problems at the moment ?

Edited by pocster
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4 minutes ago, pocster said:

Because the pavers etc. will be higher by 50mm . Gate won’t clear them when open . Least of my problems at the moment ?

 

How long are those hinge pins?

 

Stackowashers?

 

Edited by Ferdinand
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2 hours ago, pocster said:

Not sure what you mean 

 

A line barrier to stop the water tracking along the ceiling and making it drip off (if there are significant enough amounts).

 

Unless you're now 100% sure the source of entry.

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It looks like water could easily track back under this cover and really confuse things, the covers need to fold down below the top of the windows to create a drip line.  

DA611773-8AD2-45FA-BADE-144641590FA2.jpeg

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17 hours ago, Cpd said:

It looks like water could easily track back under this cover and really confuse things, the covers need to fold down below the top of the windows to create a drip line.  

DA611773-8AD2-45FA-BADE-144641590FA2.jpeg

This is covered better now 

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26 minutes ago, pocster said:

I give up !

Here we are this morning after rain - pretty much the same .

Is it remotely possible it’s condensation???? ( desperate now ! )

 

 

035EEB49-0765-4708-9FAC-BA51520F6BD2.jpeg

Which is lower - the corner of the light or the 'end' of the water track towards the wall? Even if it's only a mm or two, it might help indcate the 'source' of the moisture. My gut feel it that it's coming from the opening - which should be bone dry - doesn't look it in the picture?

 

The covering of the light has to be much better than you had (I see you'd just commented) - a full sheet of OSB that is a clear 100mm overhang on each side, and then a 45x45 batten round the edges, then the DPM stapled down. This will ensure categorically there is no moisture getting in.

 

I can't see it being condensation - it would be far more uniform over the whole ceiling. The source has to be that opening the more I think of it - the rest of the space looks nicely dry. You'll get there.

 

 

 

 

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Why don't you get an angle grinder and put a score ACROSS the crack line (i.e at 90degrees) - say 5mm deep and 100mm long. See if that stops the moisture tracking? And see which side it's coming from that way? Just a thought? ANy tracking moisture should stop and drip down to the floor rather than permeat across the concrete and the line of the crack?

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Just now, pocster said:

That particular window is covered like so 

 

 

image.jpg

What’s confusing is underneath the up stand ( wood section ) is bone dry .

its only damp half way down the initial ceiling slab 

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I think a very careful dye test, doing one small area outside at a time, is perhaps the easiest way to find out where the water is getting in.  This needs to be done very carefully because you don't get a second chance, once dye has found its way to the area around the window opening you won't be able to prove any other leak points.

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1 minute ago, jamiehamy said:

Why don't you get an angle grinder and put a score ACROSS the crack line (i.e at 90degrees) - say 5mm deep and 100mm long. See if that stops the moisture tracking? And see which side it's coming from that way? Just a thought? ANy tracking moisture should stop and drip down to the floor rather than permeat across the concrete and the line of the crack?

That’s a good plan !

I’ll stick my pir over the track for today to proof not condensation ( yeah I know ! ) . Then if tracks still there tomorrow with grind a line across the track 

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5 minutes ago, JSHarris said:

I think a very careful dye test, doing one small area outside at a time, is perhaps the easiest way to find out where the water is getting in.  This needs to be done very carefully because you don't get a second chance, once dye has found its way to the area around the window opening you won't be able to prove any other leak points.

 

Different coloured dyes should do that?

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