[Strawbale]lime and earth plaster and heating systems in bale walls
Catherine Wanek
blackrange at zianet...
Wed Oct 13 18:52:21 CEST 2004
Hello Jeroen --
Rene D. has given you excellent suggestions ..... I have two things to add:
If the white powdery film is not fungus, but efflorescence (as was earlier
suggested) then white vinegar will also clean that up easily.
In addition to heat, I suggest using fans to help dry out the interior of
the wall. Ventilation is key to a drying strategy -- heat alone, in the
presence of moisture and food, will encourage fungal growth.
regards,
Catherine Wanek
At 09:00 AM 10/12/04 +0200, you wrote:
>Jeroen,
>
>At 07:36 AM 10/12/04, you wrote:
>>I try and start to drain the foundations next summer.
>
>Why wait till next summer? I suggest you start as soon as possible. The
>winter can actually be a good drying season off course depending on the
>weather. The lower the temperatures the better.
>
>
>>In the mean time I would love to get rid of the fungus without using
>>chemicals. I have stript the wall (it's only one inner wall though load
>>bearing) for the lower 20 centimeters or so. Because the earth plaster
>>wouldn't cure at all.
>
>You can use vinegar to kill fungus this is also usual practice on wooden
>boats to kill off fungus when they have moisture problems. Earth Plaster
>does not cure but dry
>
>>I hope lime will be able to cure so I can finish the
>>wall.
>
>This is a very bad idea: first of all the plaster will get a bad start in
>life; second you will effectively capture the moisture behind the plaster
>allowing it to only dry very slowly even though the lime plaster is
>relatively permeable. The fact that the earth plaster is not drying
>actually tells me quite clearly that putting lime plaster over this wall
>will lead to a failure of the plaster and could lead to more problems
>further along the line.
>
>>Here comes this shrinking problem (or not) because there is a heating system
>>installed in the wall the same way as a heated floor is with plastic tubes
>>running hot water through it.
>
>The heating will help tremendously to dry the wall once you have removed
>the moisture source.
>
>> This means big and rapid changes in the temperature off the plaster. So
>>will this be a problem for lime? Earth plaster is working really well and we
>>have had no cracks.
>>
>>Does anybody have experience with strawbale wall's using this heating
>>system? We are planning an extension to our house and would love this
>>heating system there also.
>
>Yes this wall heating is quite general practice including SB projects and
>at least one I know about in the Netherlands. Look at my website
>http://home.hetnet.nl/~rene.dalmeijer follow links to SB
>houses>Middelharnis for a picture of the tubing being installed on the
>surface of a SB wall (click on the thumbnail next to the text) The owner
>can tell you details of the installation.
>
>
>
>Rene
>
>
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