dampness$18825$ - definitie. Wat is dampness$18825$
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Wat (wie) is dampness$18825$ - definitie

QUANTITY OF WATER CONTAINED IN A MATERIAL
Moisture content; Degree of saturation (earth sciences); Water saturation; Dimensionless water content; Residual water content; Saturated water content; Volumetric water content; Moisture-content measurement; Gravimetric water content; Gravimetric moisture content; Volumetric moisture content; Degree of saturation (soil); Normalized volumetric water content; Effective saturation; Dampness; Water Content; Soil saturation; User:NizhenNZ/New sandbox; Soil moisture measurement

rising damp         
  • An example of a damp proof course of slate in a brick wall intended to prevent rising damp
  • Damp Houses – British Medical Journal – 25 May 1872
  • Effect of placing a porous brick in a shallow tray of water
  • A packet of damp-proofing rods
  • Damp-proofing rods installed along a mortar course to treat rising damp by forming a damp-proof course (DPC)
  • Damp-proofing cream leaking from injection holes. This can make it difficult to ascertain whether sufficient cream has remained in the holes for treatment to be successful.
  • "Next we look, but in vain, for any signs of a damp proof course, or for any gratings to show that ventilation to the ground floor joists has not been forgotten. The results of the first two defects are visible enough in the house as it now exists, in the damp and green stains which are everywhere to be seen from the level of the ground to some two or three feet up the walls." ''Helps To Health'', Sir Henry Burdett (1885), p. 138.
  • Vitrified stone-ware damp-course
  • Gaps between damp course for damp to rise in jerry-built house - Helps To Health, Sir Henry Burdett (1885), page 124
  • Mould growth caused by condensation in dead air pocket behind books
  • Plaster removed from a wall as part of a rising damp treatment. The wall was replastered using a sand-cement render.
  • Porous tubes used to treat rising damp are visible on the outside of this Victorian house.
  • A wall affected by rising damp
  • Moderate rising damp on an internal wall
  • Application of a sand:cement render to a wall as part of a rising damp treatment
PRESENCE OF UNWANTED MOISTURE IN THE STRUCTURE OF A BUILDING
Rising damp; Rising damp (structural); Penetrative damp; Structural moisture; Moisture (structural); Penetrating damp; Rising damp in buildings
¦ noun Brit. moisture absorbed from the ground into a wall.
rising damp         
  • An example of a damp proof course of slate in a brick wall intended to prevent rising damp
  • Damp Houses – British Medical Journal – 25 May 1872
  • Effect of placing a porous brick in a shallow tray of water
  • A packet of damp-proofing rods
  • Damp-proofing rods installed along a mortar course to treat rising damp by forming a damp-proof course (DPC)
  • Damp-proofing cream leaking from injection holes. This can make it difficult to ascertain whether sufficient cream has remained in the holes for treatment to be successful.
  • "Next we look, but in vain, for any signs of a damp proof course, or for any gratings to show that ventilation to the ground floor joists has not been forgotten. The results of the first two defects are visible enough in the house as it now exists, in the damp and green stains which are everywhere to be seen from the level of the ground to some two or three feet up the walls." ''Helps To Health'', Sir Henry Burdett (1885), p. 138.
  • Vitrified stone-ware damp-course
  • Gaps between damp course for damp to rise in jerry-built house - Helps To Health, Sir Henry Burdett (1885), page 124
  • Mould growth caused by condensation in dead air pocket behind books
  • Plaster removed from a wall as part of a rising damp treatment. The wall was replastered using a sand-cement render.
  • Porous tubes used to treat rising damp are visible on the outside of this Victorian house.
  • A wall affected by rising damp
  • Moderate rising damp on an internal wall
  • Application of a sand:cement render to a wall as part of a rising damp treatment
PRESENCE OF UNWANTED MOISTURE IN THE STRUCTURE OF A BUILDING
Rising damp; Rising damp (structural); Penetrative damp; Structural moisture; Moisture (structural); Penetrating damp; Rising damp in buildings
If a building has rising damp, moisture that has entered the bricks has moved upwards from the floor, causing damage to the walls. (BRIT)
N-UNCOUNT
Damp (structural)         
  • An example of a damp proof course of slate in a brick wall intended to prevent rising damp
  • Damp Houses – British Medical Journal – 25 May 1872
  • Effect of placing a porous brick in a shallow tray of water
  • A packet of damp-proofing rods
  • Damp-proofing rods installed along a mortar course to treat rising damp by forming a damp-proof course (DPC)
  • Damp-proofing cream leaking from injection holes. This can make it difficult to ascertain whether sufficient cream has remained in the holes for treatment to be successful.
  • "Next we look, but in vain, for any signs of a damp proof course, or for any gratings to show that ventilation to the ground floor joists has not been forgotten. The results of the first two defects are visible enough in the house as it now exists, in the damp and green stains which are everywhere to be seen from the level of the ground to some two or three feet up the walls." ''Helps To Health'', Sir Henry Burdett (1885), p. 138.
  • Vitrified stone-ware damp-course
  • Gaps between damp course for damp to rise in jerry-built house - Helps To Health, Sir Henry Burdett (1885), page 124
  • Mould growth caused by condensation in dead air pocket behind books
  • Plaster removed from a wall as part of a rising damp treatment. The wall was replastered using a sand-cement render.
  • Porous tubes used to treat rising damp are visible on the outside of this Victorian house.
  • A wall affected by rising damp
  • Moderate rising damp on an internal wall
  • Application of a sand:cement render to a wall as part of a rising damp treatment
PRESENCE OF UNWANTED MOISTURE IN THE STRUCTURE OF A BUILDING
Rising damp; Rising damp (structural); Penetrative damp; Structural moisture; Moisture (structural); Penetrating damp; Rising damp in buildings
Structural dampness is the presence of unwanted moisture in the structure of a building, either the result of intrusion from outside or condensation from within the structure.

Wikipedia

Water content

Water content or moisture content is the quantity of water contained in a material, such as soil (called soil moisture), rock, ceramics, crops, or wood. Water content is used in a wide range of scientific and technical areas, and is expressed as a ratio, which can range from 0 (completely dry) to the value of the materials' porosity at saturation. It can be given on a volumetric or mass (gravimetric) basis.