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Wednesday, May 4, 2005 | ||
Bad Links? | Condensation the bane of skylights existenceBy TIM CARTER Q. I have three skylights in my house. They dont seem to leak during rain or the summer months, but during the winter I get a drip in the family room and bathroom. It is damaging the drywall. Because of the locations on the roof, I dont feel safe doing the work myself. If I call a contractor, what should I ask or be looking for? How do I know they can actually correct the problem? Should I call a roofer or other type of contractor? B.A., Brawley, Calif. A. I am a big fan of skylights for any number of reasons. I can clearly remember back in the 1970s when the plastic bubble skylights were the rage. I installed many and never had a problem with leaks from rain, ice or snow. But condensation was indeed the bane of these older-technology windows to the sky. Those who installed them near kitchens, bathrooms or other rooms that had lots of live plants suffered as the invisible warm, humid air from these rooms floated up into the skylight tunnel. There the cool surface of the skylight caused the water vapor in the air to rapidly condense. High-quality skylights that come from the factory with insulated glass and pre-engineered roof flashing systems are your best defense against leaks from external water sources as well as from interior water vapor. But extreme exterior temperatures combined with abnormally high interior relative humidity can tax the limits of this technology. Based upon your description, I dont feel you have a true roof or flashing leak. If the skylight is dry during severe summer rainstorms that often create lots of wind-driven rain, then the flashing system must be doing its job. Ice damming can indeed defeat most flashings that were not installed over the top of ice-dam membranes. These pliable membranes are applied in direct contact with the roof deck and the sides of the exterior of the skylight before the flashings are installed. They create a fantastic barrier to ice-dam water that backs up under shingles and flashings. However, if your skylight drips when there is no snow on the roof, I think it is safe to assume the source of the annoying water is condensation. The problem may not be with the insulated glass. My instincts tell me the source of the water is quite possibly condensation that is forming on the underside of the metal flashings as warm, moist air from your house escapes around the rough opening that was created for the skylight. The resulting liquid water probably is running down the underside of the flashing much like water runs down the mirror in your steamy bathroom. But once at the bottom of the flashing system, it is finding a pathway back into your home. I have solved similar leaks with a two-fold approach. The first step is to remove the flashing system on the exterior of the skylight so that an ice-dam membrane can be installed between the wood roof deck and the sides of the skylight. These very sticky membranes often are a combination of asphalt and rubber compounds. When carefully lapped and folded, the membranes completely block the pathways between the skylight and the rough framing of the roof. This ensures that no water that gets past the flashing will run into your home. The second step is slightly more painful because the drywall must be removed from the sides of the skylight tunnel all the way up to the underside of the skylight. Dust and debris are often created during this process, and it can spread throughout your home. Once exposed, the gap between the rough framing lumber and the skylight can be carefully filled with a spray-urethane insulation. Once the foam has cured, trim away any excess foam, extend a vapor retarder film over the sides of the skylight tunnel or roof framing and then bend this film over the foam-filled gap so the vapor retarder stops right at the finished edge of the drywall or finished wall material. This interior vapor retarder will stop or hinder the water vapor from working its way to the colder surfaces of the skylight, where it can condense and cause chaos. To do this work, I would hire an experienced remodeling contractor. He will undoubtedly have as part of his team an experienced roofer and drywall repair person who will do a majority of the work. If the re-modeler is good, he will know how to work with the urethane foam insulation.
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