Quick Answer: Drywall acts like a wick due to capillary action. Water can travel vertically up the paper facing and gypsum core 1 inch per hour. While the floor may be dry, the moisture inside the wall cavity can rise 2-4 feet, creating a hidden mold incubator. We cut the ‘flood cut’ 12-24 inches above the visible water line to arrest this migration.
Understanding water damage repair in Houston requires a basic grasp of physics. When your home floods, the water doesn’t just sit on the floor; it actively climbs your walls through a process known as capillary action.
“Water doesn’t just sit; it climbs. If we don’t cut above the climb, we’re just farming mold.”
Gypsum, the core material of drywall, is highly porous. Combined with the paper facing, it creates a “straw-like” effect. This is why a flood that only covers the floor for a few hours can result in moisture damage two feet up the wall.
| Material | Wicking Rate | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Drywall | High (1″/hr) | Mold in 24hrs |
| Insulation | High (Sponge) | Rot |
| Wood Studs | Medium | Warping |
Homeowners often hesitate when they see restorers marking lines 12 to 24 inches above the water line. This is the “Flood Cut.” By removing the saturated material and the wet insulation behind it, we expose the structural studs to airflow, stopping mold before it starts.
Only if the moisture meter shows wicking. We try to save it, but safety comes first.
Not if there is insulation. The insulation stays wet and rots the studs.
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