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Moisture is created when a warm air mass comes in contact with a cold surface. Mostly when in contact with the uninsulated walls. Becoming cooler and falling and becoming more cold exponentially. This creates moisture on windows and mould on walls and ceilings. Moisture in the home also comes from us breathing, sweating and cooking among other sources.
Good curtains will help your heat loss with windows and something to stop warm air falling in behind the curtains from the top(convection currents). Older buildings used pelmets to stop the air flow downwards behind curtains.
The cure is insulation creating a thermal envelope and ventilation.
TMF
You're not a westie!
You know "science".
If a man is alone in the woods and there isn't a woke Hollywood around to call him racist, is he still white?
Was not wrong in the first place, let me repeat a question mark (thats one of these in case you forgot ?) denotes a question and in fact how one learns.
Never mind the concept is beyond you I guess. You sure you and I never worked together, your not a Richard Cranium are you? Or perhaps you are.
Its not the destination that is important its the journey.
Heh, whilst i understand the science behind the creation of moisture/condensation, we have used very good curtains, but the aluminium window frames transfer both warm and cold air. The curtains separating the room from windows don't really make too much of a difference as you're trapping cold air behind the curtains. You mention convection currents. When air behind the curtains is transferred into the room it has to be replaced with the warm air from the room, and it being cold behind the curtains will only cool the warm air and the windows get covered in condensation and the air becomes cold and you have to heat your house more etc... I understand that every little helps, but i'd be very surprised if you could save more than 50 bucks a year by adding, for arguments sake, 4000 bucks worth of insulation materials (under floor and ceiling insulation, as well as high quality curtains)... that to me is not justifyable...
Now don't rag on me as I may well have missed something, but i'm trying to understand how you can call a house future proof and yet still have to heat your house for 10 hours a day in the winter. Like i say i've come from another country and can only assume the building standards over here cater for NZ conditions. I just object to the term future proof when it's anything but, especially when we used to heat the house for 3-4 hours a day when the temperature never rose above -5 all day.
I didn't think!!! I experimented!!!
Lol I'm not gonna rag on ya. You want to know and understand things.
The moisture build up is a combined effort of the "Whole House"
Houses should be enveloped in insulation to keep the temperature of the house, furniture and all things inside warm. That way it takes less to heat and re-heat.
In the building you speak of they probably have fully insulated with good materials specific to their purpose and have adequate if not over adequate R values to boot.
They will be properly ventilated also.
In Nz we have a legacy of 100 years of uninsulated homes where the owners shut all the windows to stop the "cold air" from getting in.
I came across one man who had taped plastic over all his windows and stopped and "cold air" getting in. The house was wet with moisture and the air full of mouldy smell. His young daughter also died of a respitory demise.
I agree we shouldn't have to heat our houses so much and yes I agree our building standards have probably been crappy.
Oh and the curtain thing. Pelmets were built above and housed the curtains to stop the flow of warm air down behind the curtains. The curtains should also be run all the way to the floor to help prevent the current occurring too.
TMF
Soooooooo was there a consensus regarding the best product to use? With one you risk electrocution, another doesnt breath and therefore rots your floor joists, another will just fall out over time and another is a potential toxic fire hazard!!!!
Whats the best way to go?
.......Bump
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