drying out after a flood
Posted: Sat Jun 07, 2014 6:31 pm
Hi
Last week a large amount of rain fell, and the city's sewer pumping system failed. Water (mostly stormwater?) bubbled up out of the floor drains of my basement shop much faster than my pump could handle it. So I took off for the hardware store and bought expansion plugs and plugged the floor drains and then the pump gained. What a mess, but fortunately I have insurance for this.
The shin-deep water was lightly seasoned, and luckily I'd done more than a cursory sweep of dust a couple of days earlier. Some MDF forms and a fair amount of other materials were ruined, but most things had been off the floor. It was still necessary to move all of the machinery and remove many plastic tubs of material (I was smart enough not to use cardboard boxes for storage.) so that the professional cleaners could come and steam/disinfect the floor and walls. They left an industrial dehumidifer and three massive axial fans to run continuously for 3-5 days. I also had to saw out the bottom 6 inches of some wood partition walls.
Here's a recommendation for you:
If you can, have a backflow check valve installed on your main sewer line if possible. If you can't, then you can buy check valves ($20 ea) that fit in the floor drains that allow drainage out, but not backflow, by means of a floating seal. >This could have saved a huge amount of work and annoyance, and a $500 deductible.<
Also, below is a link to an online relative humidity calculator that you can use with a digital thermometer. Take a dry temp reading, and then wrap the temperature probe in a wet paper towel (room temp water) and place at the intake hose of a shop vacuum (not the exhaust port). Record the lowest wet-bulb temperature and then enter the dry & wet temps into the calculator along with the current barometric pressure (from a weather website). The calculator will cogitate and give you information. At this moment, the shop humidity is 48.5% RH, which is a nice number to see.
http://www.vaisala.com/humiditycalculat ... l?lang=ger
Last week a large amount of rain fell, and the city's sewer pumping system failed. Water (mostly stormwater?) bubbled up out of the floor drains of my basement shop much faster than my pump could handle it. So I took off for the hardware store and bought expansion plugs and plugged the floor drains and then the pump gained. What a mess, but fortunately I have insurance for this.
The shin-deep water was lightly seasoned, and luckily I'd done more than a cursory sweep of dust a couple of days earlier. Some MDF forms and a fair amount of other materials were ruined, but most things had been off the floor. It was still necessary to move all of the machinery and remove many plastic tubs of material (I was smart enough not to use cardboard boxes for storage.) so that the professional cleaners could come and steam/disinfect the floor and walls. They left an industrial dehumidifer and three massive axial fans to run continuously for 3-5 days. I also had to saw out the bottom 6 inches of some wood partition walls.
Here's a recommendation for you:
If you can, have a backflow check valve installed on your main sewer line if possible. If you can't, then you can buy check valves ($20 ea) that fit in the floor drains that allow drainage out, but not backflow, by means of a floating seal. >This could have saved a huge amount of work and annoyance, and a $500 deductible.<
Also, below is a link to an online relative humidity calculator that you can use with a digital thermometer. Take a dry temp reading, and then wrap the temperature probe in a wet paper towel (room temp water) and place at the intake hose of a shop vacuum (not the exhaust port). Record the lowest wet-bulb temperature and then enter the dry & wet temps into the calculator along with the current barometric pressure (from a weather website). The calculator will cogitate and give you information. At this moment, the shop humidity is 48.5% RH, which is a nice number to see.
http://www.vaisala.com/humiditycalculat ... l?lang=ger