International Association of Certified Home Inspectors
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| General Inspection Discussion This is a place for general discussion about the home inspection industry. Try to keep the posts topical, but they need not be as specific as the other areas of this board. |
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#1
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Does anyone ever test for humidity?
I know this is not part of the SOP but was just wondering. It would be nice to have for homes with a basement to see if there humidity levels were high. I have a gauge in my own home & keep my humidity between 35 to 45% By the way Professional Equipment has a 50% off sale on some nice items. http://www.professionalequipment.com...119-5050_m3150 |
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#2
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Yes I take a relative humidity reading when warranted.
Spend the $$ and buy a good one. The cheaper ones aren't worth their weight and can give you false readings. Submit your AWARDS NOMINATIONS here Visit the InterNACHI Awards web portal here Blessed are the blissfully ignorant... for they shall be easily led...
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#3
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When I get into a house I take a RH%, mostly for conversation and figure how sick I will be in a few hours. I did a home inspection where the house was rh 72%, had mold on walls, and mushrooms growing out of the carpet. Since the air was moist, the spores had to be thick. I felt like I chain smoked a pack of cigs when I was done.
tom |
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#4
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$20.00, works fine. I do outside, home interior and basement/crawlspace. Outside provides a baseline, interior and crawl readings can alert you to moisture intrusion you can't see.
Kenton Shepard, InterNACHI member # 04082383 Certified Master Inspector (CMI) InterNACHI Director of International Development Director of Green Building EXPERT WITNESS SERVICE Conventional and Log homes (303) 717-8940
Last edited by kshepard; 10/2/08 at 2:38 AM.. |
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#5
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Please Note:
Brian A. MacNeish is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
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#6
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Please Note:
ldapkus is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
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#7
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Please Note:
Brian A. MacNeish is a non-member guest and is in no way affiliated with InterNACHI or its members.
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#8
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I agree with Brian. There are way too many variables when determining a base line RH level.
Time of day is one huge factor. |
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#9
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Oh, just some extra information. On the house that had a 70% RH, everything came up 'alarm' levels with my moisture meter. Having the RH helped me explain how I could not differentiate between the past like damage stains and an present water damage.
tom |
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#10
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Outside humidity levels here seem to average between 25% and 40% but wood levels measured in log home exteriors are typically barely measureable with the surveymaster which has about 10% as the bottom of its range. Even with the conversion chart, wood moisture levels don't appear to mirror average realtive humidity. Kenton Shepard, InterNACHI member # 04082383 Certified Master Inspector (CMI) InterNACHI Director of International Development Director of Green Building EXPERT WITNESS SERVICE Conventional and Log homes (303) 717-8940
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