Guest guest Posted October 28, 2008 Report Share Posted October 28, 2008 In our particular case, the root cause was perched water on the hardpan soil under the house, which brought something with it as it wicked and evaporated its way into the house, both through the slab and through cracks in the slab. The mold work was done by Dr. Chin Yang's lab, and was extremely valuable but in the end said that mold was not the problem. We cut open a number of walls, found nothing visible, and the samples agreed. Correcting the drainage problem stopped the moisture coming into the house, and removing our belongings got rid of the accumulated contaminants (we had already replaced carpet with hard surface floors). We sold the house with a disclosure to a real estate professional who lived there with his family for 5 years, without problems, before moving on. If I had to speculate now -- or could turn back the clock and do that last few thousand dollars of testing -- I would analyze the perched water for metal salts, and look closer at the efflourescence on the garage floor to see if something unusual was being leached from the slab (all the concrete for stemwalls, slab, and garage floor would likely have been poured on the same day). Steve Chalmers stevec@... > > > >> > >> I'm new to the group but am with a public company that does > > traditional inspections as well as indoor air quality testing. A new > > generation of inspectors so to say. A home or business will be > > inspected and when healthy displays the attached seal. I am proud to > > post the Healthy Home Assurance Certification on my home. > >> > >> Company website www.espusa.net or number > >> > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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