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tenant in my flat - condensation issues
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budgetdiyer wrote: »Not in my experience, i take great delight in informing tenants (after i've inspected the problem and advised on how to minimise condensation) to contact environmental health about their 'damp' problems, you know what 99% of times i never hear about their damp problems again...
BTW you know over ventilating can cause condensation too? I wouldn't ask any of my tenants to leave windows open all day during the winter, but they should ventilate humid rooms after use (Ie bathrooms, kitchen etc).
I once had a tenant who caused all sorts of fuss about damp in a flat (that had been tenanted for 10 years with no previous problems.) - When she moved out, the gas readings showed she'd used less than 30 units of gas during a 6 month tenancy in a COLD winter!
Would you rent a house from budget (and bodge-it) diyer?1. The house price crash will begin.
2. There will be a dead cat bounce.
3. The second leg down will commence.
4. I will buy your house for a song.0 -
At the right price...If that is what I can afford then as long as it looks acceptable then yes. If over a period of time the bodge-it DIY deteriorates then I'd hand in my notice and move on.SecondLegDownIsTheBigOne wrote: »Would you rent a house from budget (and bodge-it) diyer?:footie:
Regular savers earn 6% interest (HSBC, First Direct, M&S)
Loans cost 2.9% per year (Nationwide) = FREE money.
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