Drymatic II Heat Dries Both Big and Small Jobs
Luke Hillier and Michael King
H20 Flood Rescue, Sydney NSW
Job of the month October 2020
Our Job of the Month for October goes to Luke Hillier and Michael King from H2) Flood Rescue in Sydney. The structural drying job has a fantastic little setup, and you can watch the video in our Drymatic Owners Club Facebook Group.
A ruptured pipe within a concrete slab in the ceiling was the cause of this water damage job. The concrete slab was then saturated and created damage to the ceiling. The main part of this job was to dry the concrete slab first so that the false ceiling could be replaced afterwards.
A Drymatic II heat drying machine is used in this confined bathroom space and still works very well. Ducting is placed up into the ceiling cavity where the Drymatic II is sucking wet air from the cavity and heating it up in the machine. The hot air is then pushed up into the ceiling to to raise the temperature of the ceiling cavity. The Drymatic is in recirculation mode while this is happening, pulling wet air, heating it up and pushing it back into the cavity.
When the Drymatic II goes into exhaust mode it pushes wet air out the window into, and pulls new replenished air into the machine, heating it up, and pushing it into the ceiling cavity.
With the Drymatic II heat drying machine you have the option to set your own parameters for both exhaust and recirculation mode to suit any job, any time, anywhere.
No matter what job you are on the Drymatic heat drying equipment is the innovative solution for any water damage restoration job. There are no limits to what the equipment can do, especially with a little bit of imagination.
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