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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  
Old 11/20/07, 2:04 PM
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David C. Macy David C. Macy is offline
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Default Humidity Gauge

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  
Old 11/20/07, 11:46 PM
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Default Re: Humidity Gauge

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.




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Old 11/21/07, 12:08 AM
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Default Re: Humidity Gauge

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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Old 11/21/07, 12:21 AM
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Default Re: Humidity Gauge

$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.




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Last edited by kshepard; 10/2/08 at 2:38 AM..
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Old 11/21/07, 5:54 AM
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Default Re: Humidity Gauge

Quote:
Originally Posted by kshepard
$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.
The outside RH can easily change by 20-50% from morning to afternoon daily or with a change in weather over a day!! IMO, it's not a reliable baseline.
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Old 11/21/07, 8:06 AM
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Default Re: Humidity Gauge

Quote:
Originally Posted by Brian A. MacNeish
The outside RH can easily change by 20-50% from morning to afternoon daily or with a change in weather over a day!! IMO, it's not a reliable baseline.
In your opinion Brian , what is?????
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Old 11/21/07, 9:35 AM
Brian A. MacNeish Brian A. MacNeish is offline
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Default Re: Humidity Gauge

Quote:
Originally Posted by ldapkus
In your opinion Brian , what is?????
Knowing the average wood moisture contents for homes in your area from season to season would be a start. Plus using the chart of wood moisture content when exposed to high (70-80%+) continuous air RH's would allow one to make an educated recommendation that if conditions continue or aren't changed longterm rot/fungal growth may begin.
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Old 11/21/07, 9:50 AM
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Default Re: Humidity Gauge

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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Old 11/21/07, 11:55 AM
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Default Re: Humidity Gauge

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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Old 11/24/07, 11:07 PM
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Default Re: Humidity Gauge

Quote:
Originally Posted by Brian A. MacNeish
Knowing the average wood moisture contents for homes in your area from season to season would be a start. Plus using the chart of wood moisture content when exposed to high (70-80%+) continuous air RH's would allow one to make an educated recommendation that if conditions continue or aren't changed longterm rot/fungal growth may begin.
You have a good point there Brian, but I find that if I do it on every home I start to get a feel for humidty levels. The readings I get are not something I'd typically use in a report but a high one inside makes me pull out the moisture meter and poke around.

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.




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InterNACHI Director of International Development
Director of Green Building

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Conventional and Log homes

(303) 717-8940
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