Hi,
We have just had a couple of our old wooden windows replaced with UPVC and were due to paint the new interior wooden cills when we noticed that there is frequently moisture (and now some mould) soaking into the interior wooden cill along the bottom of the window and also a few inches up the sides. This appears to happen when the outside temp is particularly cold (like much of this winter!!). When we looked outside we saw that there is a gap all along the under side of the frame, between the frame and the lead tray, big enough to just about push my fingers to the back of the frame. I can certainly see the underside of the frame. The exterior cill is the original cement tile cill and does slope quite steeply. We presume that the moisture was because cold air was coming under the frame directly to the turn up of the lead tray and the wooden cills and then meeting the warm air in the house. I spoke to the (FENSA registered) fitters about sealing this gap and they have said that they do not see a problem and that we should leave the windows ajar because it is the windows being too efficient?! The windows are opened on a regular basis, but obviously not when it is freezing outside! I would have thought that some expanding foam and a bead or some cement along the exterior would have done the job and prevented airflow under the frame? They say that this is difficult because of the expansion and contraction of the lead? Can anyone PLEASE advise?? Thanks
Simon