Potato cellar - floor slab - construction

  • Erstellt am 2020-08-05 05:33:32

haydee

2020-08-13 22:54:02
  • #1
Sealed from the floor. Just don’t let you get a moisture problem in the masonry and the plaster has to come off again. Tractor garage with plaster and concrete floor huge moisture problem plaster has to come off, sandstone cellar with clay floor is dry
 

nordanney

2020-08-13 23:11:41
  • #2

I have already shared my experience/knowledge, but you just don't want to hear it. However, I really find the alternatives cool!
 

11ant

2020-08-14 00:54:56
  • #3
It seems to me, Struwwelpeter Silie is in the defiant phase
 

Peter Silie

2020-08-14 08:47:22
  • #4


No, disappointed that you probably cannot answer simple questions due to a lack of technical knowledge and flee into some nebulous times, in the potato cellar that was the ultimate.
Either I become an apple wine producer and farmer now, or you skip a thread if you have nothing productive to contribute.
Yesterday I was able to get a solution from my private circle that “possibly maybe and perhaps” was still far superior.
Nevertheless, thanks for your sympathy.
 

nordanney

2020-08-14 08:54:32
  • #5
Productive is: Seal the floor, but then please consider the entire basement and excavate completely from the outside to seal EVERYTHING. What still needs to be done on the floors inside the other rooms, I cannot say due to lack of knowledge about your basement’s condition. If you only want to seal the open area, the water will come out somewhere else. Potato cellar dry, rest of the basement wet. ==> Professional advice Then let us poor devils share what the private wizard suggests!
 

11ant

2020-08-14 14:51:32
  • #6

A stubborn head is not a "solution". If I couldn’t handle the accusation of dilettantism, I would have had to look for another profession; I could have gotten the same social esteem as a politician or used car dealer. But it’s not about re-educating you from a rice and noodle fan to potatoes, rather that the supposed bug is a feature, a kind of climate valve of your cellar, and you would have to be hopelessly stupid to plug this hole with ignorance. Of course, it’s your house and you can ignore as many warnings as you like. And it may take twenty years until your heirs say "Grandpa was an idiot"—but one thing is certain: what you envision as a "solution" is nothing but a time bomb for the building fabric. The moisture will not yield to your stubbornness—it will find a way, and no one guarantees that the future damage sites will be just as conveniently accessible. If it’s worth a long-term most expensive workbench foundation to you to slowly demolish the house around it, then please, don’t be disturbed by warnings. They only come from merchants, what do they know about technology anyway
 

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