Basement Dehumidifier Advice

   / Basement Dehumidifier Advice #11  
A dehumidifier is a must have in any basement, IMHO. Just for the summer months mostly. Your basement must be kept above a certain temperature for it to be effective. For the dehumidifier in my basement, it has to be above 72* or the coils freeze up.
 
   / Basement Dehumidifier Advice #12  
I cannot recall the brand that the one I had was for sure but I think it was a Kenmore. It came with a one gallon plastic tank with a molded drain fitting. I sat the unit on a concrete block with a hose from the tank to a Little Giant condensate pump. I ran the pump drain line up seven plus feet to the sewer line from my washer. Using a trap and some bushings, the condensate pump eliminated the daily tank dumping. Through ten years of running, the dehumidifier never quit but I replaced the pump once. I only had some seepage when wind driven rain hit the west side of that house but that concrete basement would rust things fast even with a parimeter drain. It was a 1600 square foot house with a full basement. I could not tell you the summer temperature. It had an oil furnace with a hotwater coil backed up with an electric hot water heater. I bypassed the furnace for hot water in warmer months. Dehumidifiers can use some power but any costs were well worth it for the difference it made.
 
   / Basement Dehumidifier Advice
  • Thread Starter
#14  
I've done some research into the Dryloc. I do not think it is going to work. These walls are rough concrete where you can actually see and feel aggregate. Maybe if I cover over the rough stuff with hydraulic cement then apply Dryloc it might work. Billrog, I'll look into the Xypex but if it paints on my walls are probably too rough.

Gutters work as typical gutters do. But, this seepage comes whether the gutters are clogged or not. Grade is flat. Not ideal but improving grade is not an option for many reasons. No critter tunnels but possibly something worse. There are 4 terra-cotta pipes on the front of the house which used to go from the gutter downspouts, all the way under basement of the house and down the hill in the back yard. This was probably a brilliant idea in 1930 and probably worked well for a few weeks. But as long as I have been around it has not worked. My gutters no longer empty into these and they have probably been filled in with roots and soil for decades and I have no idea if they contribute to the problem. The seepage occurs in places that do not line up with these pipes. My downspouts extend out into the yard now, as mentioned the grade is just about flat-level.
 
   / Basement Dehumidifier Advice #15  
George because digging wasn't an option I've dealt with 2 situations similar to yours only I don't know your soil type. One was for a customer with the same type of old ugly concrete which I had sand blasted and painted with a similar product to Xypex mixed up like a runny pancake mix. Because of the expense and mess I would not recommend it as easy or practical under most situations.
The second one was a house I owned on the west coast where it rained a lot and water ran in every time it rained and I'd have to pump it out. What I did there was pour a 3' wide concrete side walk completely around the house sloped away. In both cases over 30 yrs. later the basements are still dry. These ideas may not be of any use to you but just examples of alternative measures.
Hydraulic cement works well in chiseled out cracks and as for anything that gets pained on the exposed concrete and to be very clean for it to adhere and work as advertised. Nothing will be a quick easy fix.
 
   / Basement Dehumidifier Advice #16  
A downspout dumping water in the NW corner of the house may leak into the house on the SE side. Water makes its way where it wants to go in a rather meandering way. As saturated as my yard was after month of rain, I know there were plenty of subteranium streams.
 
   / Basement Dehumidifier Advice #17  
I sealed several concrete walls in a bermed house with it that were always damp before. . The stuff really stinks by my thinking. it is thick almost like a paste. When it is fully dry, you can paint over it.

We had a leak in the basement here after road construction and all the blasting and ground shaking caused the crack. i sealed it with hydraulic cement, and UGL's over that for an area to each side.. never have seen another drop. Check it out.
I'm going to have to take a look at this stuff myself - I've always been wary of it's ability to keep seepage out.
 

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