Musty Smell After Remediation
egfurnishings
4 years ago
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Comments (19)
GN Builders L.L.C
4 years agoRelated Discussions
musty smells after a flood
Comments (0)Last Spring I got water in my finished basement due to an exterior surface water (not ground water) problem that has since been corrected. The problem is I still get some musty odors especially when the outside hunidity level is high. I live in a raised ranch so about 3.5 feet of the basement is below grade. I noticed when I was cleaning up the water that when they built the basement they used some type of backerboard as insulation behing the baseboard radiators. This backerboard (like the kind you would use behind exterior shingles) remained damp for a long time. I also noticed that the basement walls were not insulated. My question is should I take off the wooden ledge and get behind the lower walls and try to remove some of this "backerboard" and insulate the walls with foam panels? Should I also try to use something like drylok to treat the walls to lower the moisture levels or will the foam panels help in that regard?...See MoreMusty Smell in ONE room of new home (after pressure washing)
Comments (17)Since I last posted, I've narrowed a few things down. One of the rooms that was affected (there were 2 rooms total), has been fixed. The french drain I installed around the perimeter of the front of the house, where water was creeping under the foundation, seems to have fixed the issue in the larger room. There is now no more musty smell in there. However, the other room, which is a "closet" that backs up directly to a bathroom, still has the odor, which has actually gotten worse. The smell is definitely partially sweet, and partially musty. I've cut the drywall all the way around the room to see if there is any signs of water damage, dead animals, etc inside of the walls. Interestingly enough, the inside of the walls that butt up to other rooms, smell fine. The walls that have concrete on the other side, have the odor present (perimeter walls). The only two things I haven't addressed yet are the roof (I'd have to cut the ceiling open because there is no attic access at this point for how low the roof pitches). The other thing would be the foundation (slab). I have fairly expensive laminate flooring and underlayment in that room, which would have to be removed, and the floor would have to be inspected for dampness. However, given the circumstances, it's been narrowed down quite a bit. The room has 4 walls (2 butt up to exterior concrete and 2 others butt up to interior rooms), a standard hollow core wood door, a West-facing window, and a drywall knockdown ceiling. There is only two piece of furniture in the room, which are bookcases. One is MDF (still wrapped in plastic to hold it together before I bolt it in), and the other is pine wood, also wrapped in thin plastic to protect it. I've just put two large shop fans, a big air purifier, an ionizer, and ozone generator all in the room with a big bucket of damprid (although humidity levels in that room are only 49% in south florida, which is fairly average). I've also sprayed half a can of lysol air spray into the room. I'll let you guys know how that works out, and hopefully we can figure it out. and ESMAN - let me know your notes as well. Thanks....See MoreOdd citrus/wood/musty smell from walls
Comments (1)It sounds like the home had some serious cigarette smokers. That brown/orange color coming off the walls and doors is likely nicotine. The odor you are getting may be a combination of cleaners, deodorizers and years of cigarette smoke. Some people will dishonestly mask these problems in a home they are selling by using deodorizers and basic cleaning. As you are likely finding out, it doesnâÂÂt work. Getting rid of the odor is fairly extensive. ItâÂÂs necessary to clean all surfaces with a trisodium phosphate solution or other cleaner. Then seal everything with Bin and paint. If cigarettes are your problem, itâÂÂs a big job to correct IâÂÂm sad to say. I hope I'm wrong! Good luck, This post was edited by mepop on Fri, Nov 29, 13 at 10:29...See MoreSon's musty smelling clothes
Comments (13)If he is using a TL then clean out the fabric softener dispenser. That would be a good idea regardless what kind of a machine is used, but I know on my TL that fabric softener dispenser can hold onto anything that touches it. I had the stomach flu recently. I put concentrated lysol disinfectant liquid in the wash and could smell that stuff weeks later. i couldn't figure out why since I had run bleach in the machine many times since. Well, somehow it got in the fabric softener dispenser. I cleaned it out and the smell was gone....See Moreegfurnishings
4 years agoegfurnishings
4 years agoegfurnishings
4 years agoJohn Pearson
3 years agolast modified: 3 years agoDebbie Cerasani Ricigliano Pickering
3 years agoeliyetti
3 years agoBryan Baker
3 years agoNicole Bandemer
3 years agoTuffy Fhang
5 months ago
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