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#1 |
Ephesians 2:8
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The pirate has given you good advice! Unfortunately- you have pressure from the outside trying to get in. So, putting an anti-water seal on the outside would fix the problem because the pressure will work with you. You COULD try first to go a bit more cheaply and see how this works for you- sealing that interior wall with
http://www.drylok.com/formulas/latex...-waterproofer/ Good luck!
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#2 | |
Yes I am a Pirate
![]() Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: 33°46′08″N 86°28′16″W / 33.76895°N 86.471037°W
Posts: 2,776
Trading: (52)
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I've seen hundreds of houses where interior sealer was applied, and have seen large areas of the sealer flaked off the wall where the water simply pushes a layer of the surface off that the sealer was adhered to, and it comes off in small to large patches. If the water pressure is present, it WILL find a way in, eventually. And that much water in your basement..... That can lead to mold on your wood floor support structure just like too much moisture leads to mold on your cigars. (I hope you are using a dehumidifier in the basement). I wish I could tell you that surface applications could do the trick. But they only help when you are talking about very small areas and very limited amounts of water. Your pictures say you are looking at large amounts of sub-surface water that you need to drain away from the outside.
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Ceilin' fan it stirs the air, Cigar smoke does swirl. The fragrance on the pillow case, and he thinks about the girl. Thanks, JB, 1975. |
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