If you were Registered and logged in, you could reply and use other advanced thread options
Posted by Sasquatch on October 18, 2006, 6:41 pm
It's been raining on my damn house for 3 days now with no roof. It's
raining directly onto the second floor deck. Is this a problem? Is
this just a fact of life? Will there be damage? What should I do?
What *can* I do? The builder said he brushed on Thompson's water seal
onto the floor deck. Does that help? Thanks. -John
Posted by JD on October 18, 2006, 7:56 pm
> It's been raining on my damn house for 3 days now with no roof. It's > raining directly onto the second floor deck. Is this a problem? Is > this just a fact of life? Will there be damage? What should I do? > What *can* I do? The builder said he brushed on Thompson's water seal > onto the floor deck. Does that help? Thanks. -John
Oh crap! Yer just gonna have to torch it and start over.
Posted by Glenn on October 18, 2006, 8:06 pm
message
> Oh crap! Yer just gonna have to torch it and start over.
Let it dry first!
Posted by Don on October 19, 2006, 12:38 am
> message
>> Oh crap! Yer just gonna have to torch it and start over.
> Let it dry first!
If he lets it dry he can open a tobbogan <sp> and ski store!
Posted by marson on October 18, 2006, 8:08 pm
relax. plywood/osb can take a lot of water--google "exposure 1
plywood." people will tell you how terrible it is, yet the only time
i've heard of someone having trouble with a subfloor, the manufacturer
paid to replace it. it ain't gonna melt in the rain.
> raining directly onto the second floor deck. Is this a problem? Is
> this just a fact of life? Will there be damage? What should I do?
> What *can* I do? The builder said he brushed on Thompson's water seal
> onto the floor deck. Does that help? Thanks. -John