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MOISTURE, MOLD, ICE DAM LEAKS in ATTICS & ROOFS Attic Condensation Inspect Building Exterior Comparing Two Houses Inspect Basements for Moisture or Mold Inspect Attics for Moisture or Mold Inspect the Ridge Vent System from the Attic Inspect the Soffit Vent System from the Attic Blocked Soffit Intake Vents Correcting Roof Ventilation Ridge and Eaves Venting Both Needed Continuous Soffit Intake Venting Needed Proper Roof Vent Location Roof Vent Area Ratios Un-Vented Roof Solutions Air Bypass Leaks, Thermal Tracking More Information InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map Air Conditioning InspectAPedia Bookstore Electrical Environment Exteriors Heating Home Inspection Insulate Ventilate Interiors Mold Inspect/Test Plumbing Water Septic Roofing Structure More Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge Contact Us |
Here we explain how Proper location of roof intake and outlet venting prevents Attic Condensation, Ice Dam Leaks, Attic Mold, & Roof Structure Damage. This is a section of chapter 7, "How to Correct Improper or Inadequate Attic or Under-Roof Ventilation in Buildings", part of our discussion of "Attic Condensation". This article describes inspection methods and clues to detect roof venting deficiencies, insulation defects, and attic condensation problems in buildings. It describes proper roof ventilation placement, amounts, and other details. © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. Proper Roof Vent Location for Air Intake and OutletIntake venting needs to be at the eaves or lower roof edges. Otherwise these roof areas will not be dry and cool, and we'll find water damage, condensation damage, ice dams, and often mold in these areas. Some people install the ridge vent (the easy part) and leave older gable end vents as "intake." This does not work very well. Simply pulling in the needed makeup air from typical gable end wall vents will not move air under the lower and center areas of roof sheathing, thus inadvertently encouraging moisture and mold to form in these areas. In buildings where this vent design has been used I see pretty clean roof sheathing near the ridge and near the building gable walls, but at the lower roof center and looking down to the eaves, the sheathing will often be wet, moldy, damaged. The sketch at page top is not quite right. It shows the soffit opening along the house wall where wind-blown rain may enter the soffit and wall. A better location for this opening would be at the outer edge of the soffit, just behind the fascia! Outlet Venting needs to be along the length of the ridge. On some complex roof designs and on pyramid roofs there is no ridge. On some hip roof designs the length of ridge is very short compared with the total roof length. In these cases there may be no option but to add multiple individual exit vent openings across the roof field. In this case they should be placed near the ridge so that the upper attic will be vented. Putting them at mid roof or lower is ineffective. Usually such vents are placed on just one slope of the roof so that they are not visible from the front of the building. This is ok, provided the vents are near the ridge. Otherwise the un-vented roof slope simply won't be treated. On lower single-plane shed roofs that abut an upper story building wall, venting can be provided by installing a half-ridge at the upper roof slope. Spot vents and gable end vents are a distant second choice for these designs for the reasons I outlined above. For irregular or hard-to-vent roof shapes, condensation (winter) or summer heat build-up can be relieved by a thermostatically operated attic fan - with a cutout switch to turn off the fan in case of a building fire. (Otherwise the fan spreads and speeds the fire.) But such fans do not run in cold winter weather, so you're only solving the heat problem not the winter condensation and ice dam problem. Optimum roof ventilation design: provides continuous ridge venting, continuous soffit venting, and then, close off those old gable-end vents to force the intake air to come where you want it to flow. Otherwise the exiting air at the ridge will usually pull its makeup air from the closer gable end vents and not from the soffit or eaves vents. Technical ReviewersParticular thanks are due to experts and also consumers who read these articles and suggest corrections, changes, and additions to the material. Content suggestions, technical corrections and content critique are invited for any of the content at our website.
Use links just below or at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website. If you just "scroll down" you'll miss some important articles. See links at page left. MOISTURE, MOLD, ICE DAM LEAKS in ATTICS & ROOFS | |
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MOISTURE, MOLD, ICE DAM LEAKS in ATTICS & ROOFS Attic Condensation Inspect Building Exterior Comparing Two Houses Inspect Basements for Moisture or Mold Correcting Roof Ventilation Ridge and Eaves Venting Both needed Inspect the Ridge Vent System from the Attic Inspect the Soffit Vent System from the Attic Blocked Soffit Intake Vents Correcting Roof Ventilation Ridge and Eaves Venting Both Needed Continuous Soffit Intake Venting Needed Proper Roof Vent Location Roof Vent Area Ratios Un-Vented Roof Solutions Air Bypass Leaks, Thermal Tracking More Information InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map Air Conditioning InspectAPedia Bookstore Electrical Environment Exteriors Heating Home Inspection Insulate Ventilate Interiors Mold Inspect/Test Plumbing Water Septic Roofing Structure More Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge Contact Us |
More Information on Effects of Building Moisture & Building Diagnostic Inspections and RepairsMore Reading about Dealing with Attic Mold, Identifying, Removing, and Preventing Mold in AtticsBe sure to review HOW TO FIND MOLD: How to Inspect Homes and Other Buildings for Mold - the Basics of How to Find Problem Mold Indoors in our Mold Action Guide. Here are other articles that will be helpful in evaluating attic mold presence, causes, and cures:
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04/30/2008 - 06/02/1990 - www.inspect-ny.com/atticcond9.htm - Web page design & content © 2007 Daniel Friedman All Rights Reserved