Wait until it gets really bad and then get your photo in the Telegraph looking sad and hope someone else fixes it
My bathroom doesn't actually have an extractor which is a pain, the window is left open in the bathroom most of the time though.
I'd need to get in the loft to see if there's anything up there at the minute in terms of ducting I can use, if there is then I can whack something like that in the loft and duct it out somewhere up there.
If I start messing with roof tiles or having to drill massive holes for grills it's going to get expensiveThat fan does look good, I will just need to check if there's an easy way to get the air out once its in the loft.
What sort of trade does this class as? Plumber? Electrician.
I got hold of a core drill and went straight out through the bathroom wall and fitted and extractor fan. Its very messy work but it did the trick.My bathroom doesn't actually have an extractor which is a pain, the window is left open in the bathroom most of the time though.
I'd need to get in the loft to see if there's anything up there at the minute in terms of ducting I can use, if there is then I can whack something like that in the loft and duct it out somewhere up there.
If I start messing with roof tiles or having to drill massive holes for grills it's going to get expensiveThat fan does look good, I will just need to check if there's an easy way to get the air out once its in the loft.
What sort of trade does this class as? Plumber? Electrician.
I got hold of a core drill and went straight out through the bathroom wall and fitted and extractor fan. Its very messy work but it did the trick.
Also had a mould problem in two of our other rooms (the house originally had warm air heating so no ventilation) so core drilled again and put air vents in.
Another vote for increasing ventilation, fit modern air bricks in the room affected, make sure you've got a gap between the carpet and the bottom of the door, so the air can circulate even with the door closed.
If you've got a few quid to spend, it might be worth looking at positive input ventilation. Essentially works the opposite to an extractor fan. Just constantly puts fresh air into the building.
There are already vents in the rooms but going to sort the bathroom and whack extractors in the existing vents in the rooms.
Not sure I could afford a big system.
What's the difference with air bricks?If you have the old style air bricks, then I would suggest at upgrading them to the new type first and see if that clears it, they increases the air circulation massively. Cost you a couple of quid per brick and a bag of sand and cement. Its basic levels of DIY skill to do as well.
I assume you'll be getting decent extractors so the cost going to a PIV unit would probably only be double and it'll cover the whole of the house.
What's the difference with air bricks?
How much water does that draw out, out of interest?put a dehumidifier in there
How much water does that draw out, out of interest?
(Mainly asking because have been running one myself in one bedroom for a while, and it's nowehere near as much water in it as my parents had... but their house did have condensation running down the walls at times!)
I've just got massive holes in the walls with vents on each sideSomething like I've linked below allows a lot more air to circulate than the clay style air bricks.
9 x 3 Air Brick
• Ventilation area 8,000mm²• Suitable for commercial and domestic use• Very tough and robust • Integral clip together facility allows multiple air bricks to be stackedwww.toolstation.com
It wasn't a mega expensive one, it was about £60 off Amazon.
Pretty much have it on 24/7 and holds 1.5 litres, probably empty it once week.
I'm not too sure.Do you more or less know what the power cost is per 24 hours?
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