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November/December 2009 Vol. 9 No. 7
Feature Article
Moisture Tests: Calcium Chloride vs. Relative Humidity
by David Thompson |
Handheld Meters Show Moisture at a GlanceThe quick and easy way to check a floor for moisture hot spots is to use a handheld moisture meter. There are two types. Pinless meters use radio frequency signals to detect moisture near the surface of the slab. Pin-type meters use electrodes driven into the slab to measure beneath the surface. Neither type of meter is especially accurate, but both can give you a good idea of the best areas on a floor to perform more precise moisture tests. |
While the relative humidity testing apparatus isn't as sensitive to the ambient room temperature and humidity as the calcium chloride test, it's still important that both the test hole and the probe be allowed to acclimate to the room's conditions. ASTM calls for the probe to be left in place for 72 hours to allow it to equilibrate before taking the reading, although at least one manufacturer, Wagner Electronics, makes a probe it says can equilibrate in about 15 minutes, producing a reading that's within about 3 percent of what the documentable reading will be after 72 hours.
While the relative humidity test provides a more complete picture of what's going on throughout the entire depth of the slab, it costs substantially more than calcium chloride tests - at least upfront. The testing apparatus costs between $500 and $1,000, but after the initial investment the cost per test for most systems runs about $2, which is how much the probe's disposable sleeve runs.
"In the long run relative humidity tests are more cost-effective than calcium chloride," says Paul Laurenzi, vice president for sales and marketing with Delmhorst Instrument Co. "You've got a higher cost of entry, but once you've bought the moisture meter the only consistently replaceable items are the disposable sleeves."
Manufacturers
www.delmhorst.com
www.lignomat.com
www.taylortools.com
www.wagnermeters.com
Standards information
www.astm.org



