pcatterall
Well-Known Member
I use my cheapo moisture meter all the times in buildings but wonder what use these meters ( and more expensive ones) have on yacht hulls.
Inside a building I am measuring damp which has penetrated or risen so as to make the surface damp where it is being measured. I assume that current flows across the electrodes better where the suface is damp. On a boat hull I guess that we are trying to measure the damp inside the hull rather than on the surface, if the surface is at all damp then won't the reading be completly distorted?
My instinct would be that to get a reading through a hull you would need an eletrode outside and one exactly opposite inside ( impossible to acheive)
So how does this wizardry work on our yacht hulls.
I understand that the better meters ( soveriegn?) can be set to give readings near the surface or deeper inside the material and wonder how this is acheived?
Good and bad moisture?? I assume that bad moisture is the salty stuff penetrating the gell coat and all ready to react with the chemicals in the resin. 'Good' ( well harmless) moisture could be associated with internal fresh water tanks. So some high readings may be ok if we are sure they originate from inside?
I know we get lots of repeat threads on the dreaded osmosis but I would be really interested to understand just how the meters work in a boat situation.
Inside a building I am measuring damp which has penetrated or risen so as to make the surface damp where it is being measured. I assume that current flows across the electrodes better where the suface is damp. On a boat hull I guess that we are trying to measure the damp inside the hull rather than on the surface, if the surface is at all damp then won't the reading be completly distorted?
My instinct would be that to get a reading through a hull you would need an eletrode outside and one exactly opposite inside ( impossible to acheive)
So how does this wizardry work on our yacht hulls.
I understand that the better meters ( soveriegn?) can be set to give readings near the surface or deeper inside the material and wonder how this is acheived?
Good and bad moisture?? I assume that bad moisture is the salty stuff penetrating the gell coat and all ready to react with the chemicals in the resin. 'Good' ( well harmless) moisture could be associated with internal fresh water tanks. So some high readings may be ok if we are sure they originate from inside?
I know we get lots of repeat threads on the dreaded osmosis but I would be really interested to understand just how the meters work in a boat situation.