Hygrometer rh% readings are to british standards and hold up in court so are accurate, could there be a leak in the ufh? as although the scan mode isn't good enough to know exactly how wet the substrate is,but at circa 93rh% the meter would be screaming at you as you scanned it!
All new. Old floor digged out and new damp course installed eith new concrete floor, insulation amd underfloor heating.
How new was the floor before an installer prepped and fitted on it? I have a feeling incorrect testing was carried out, floor was in fact still wet, hence now floor has failed. Again not a product failure. Installation error IMO
Nearly every concrete floor will look dry as it evaporates into the air it's when it's trapped and builds up underneath the floor covering same reason the box must be fitted for an amount of times to see how much moisture is coming from the subfloor into the box When you turn the underfloor heating on it speeds this up and pushes more moisture out Should have been forced dryed using ufh and dehumidifiers
I'm with you on that Adam. Either concrete not dry or the top screed. Gypsum based screeds are hard to test, I'd say not dry when first installed, the floor cannot dry with the karndean on top.
Just reading this thread again & I thinks it's going a bit off course. . It's probably still wet yes But from the vibe I'm picking up the fitter is banging on about the moisture coz he's now realised he's cocked up big time & looking for a get out of jail card ? So it's probably wet Definitely not had the laitance ground off Hasn't been prepped properly Resulting in a failure Parts of the sub are cracked but it still would have failed Fitter does not not pass go Does not collect $200 This all down to either not knowing or not carring probably the latter. Anhydrite is catching fitters out left right & centre all over the country hense all if us on hear ****ting are pants at the mere mention of the word. Floorlayers worst nightmare But builders love the stuff. . tIt's bi-product so it's cheap Ready mixed so quick Goes down flat as a fart and is an excellent heat conductor for UFH
Its gonna be used loads on new builds soon too as its a recycled product that looks good on their green quotas, I've seen it starting to creep in more and more.
Used 1100 yesterday flow was awful. Used Uzin 110 before and flowed out like milk. Superior product in my opinion.
Can anyone recomnend someone who might insoect the floor for us and give a professional opinion as to the cause of failure? We live in North West Wales.
If it was fitted by a Karndean registered installer, it will carry a waranty and you'll have a certificate of warranty., so could try calling the tech department. If bob the builder installed it.., I'm afraid the warranty will be invalid. Either way, hope you get it sorted at minimal cost.
We want to get to the bottom of the cause as there are several things which could be responsible, posdibly not all to do with the installation of the karndean e.g cracks in subfloor. We need an independant view by someone who is qualified in this type of work who can hopefully come to a conclusion as to where the blame lies.