Water damage restoration is different for every type of material. Concrete draws moisture into its pores. Wood warps and twists. Carpets retain water in the padding underneath.
With every material affected by water damage reacting differently, you need drying equipment that is tailored to the job at hand. Trying to apply one solution to every scenario wastes time, misses hidden damage, and sets you up for expensive callbacks down the road.
We break down what works best for drying concrete, timber, and carpet below.
Understanding Material Types
Take a moment to consider what you are drying before you start throwing fans around. Concrete is tough and porous. Moisture penetrates deep into the slab rather than just sitting on the surface. Timber is alive. Even after water damage, it reacts to changes in moisture content by shrinking and swelling. The carpet hides a lot of moisture beneath the fibers you see. While surface drying may be quick, without proper equipment that padding and subfloor can take days to fully dry.
Correct equipment selection based on material type isn’t just smart; it’s the difference between recovering water damaged materials and paying for replacement or repair later.
How to Dry Concrete
There is no single tool that is ideal for drying concrete. It presents unique problems because it can feel dry on the surface before its deep pores retain moisture for weeks. Hidden moisture in concrete destroys flooring adhesive, coatings, and finishes.
Combining several tools will achieve the best drying results:
Air movers force warm air across the surface, speeding up evaporation from the top layers of concrete. Units should be moved frequently and placed strategically to ensure even drying across the entire slab.
Desiccant dehumidifiers perform well on concrete. The dry air they produce has a lower dew point than refrigerant dehumidifiers which pull moisture from the slab rather than waiting for it to evaporate.
Containment Chambers help dry solution-resistant slabs by limiting drying efforts to a specific area. Less space equals more efficient equipment performance.
The step professionals often forget when drying concrete is monitoring the drying progress. Moisture meters only tell you what is happening at the surface. Use a calcium chloride test or in slab RH sensor to measure the moisture content below the surface. Concrete can feel dry but still retain enough moisture below to cause problems later.
How to Dry Timber
Wood is a living material that reacts to water damage by expanding and contracting. Drying it too quickly can cause surface checking and deformities. Leaving it too long results in structural decay.
Air movers should be used to establish uniform airflow over all surfaces and throughout any hidden cavities. When drying hardwood flooring, a floor drying mat can be connected to a specialized drying unit to draw moisture from underneath the boards themselves.
Running a dehumidifier decreases ambient humidity and helps timber release moisture into the air. Blowers dry wood by driving moisture out of the material. If that moisture has nowhere to go, drying will take significantly longer. Keeping RH below 50% ensures the surrounding air can absorb more moisture.
Directed heat drying systems are also used for drying timber inside wall cavities. These systems allow you to apply low, consistent heat to spaces otherwise inaccessible to traditional air movers.
Invest in a high-quality pin-type or pinless moisture meter to validate drying progress. Moisture levels should decrease at regular intervals. For indoor use, most timber should reach between 9% – 14% moisture content before it’s considered dry.
How to Dry Carpet
Drying carpet is deceiving. While the carpet itself may feel dry to walk on hours after extraction, the padding beneath those fibers and the subfloor underneath can retain water. That moisture will turn to mold if it isn’t extracted.
Recommended Equipment
Wet extractors or Shop-Vacs. Unless the carpet you are drying has gone through a liquid damage incident, start with extraction. Every drop of water you remove from the carpet before beginning air drying cuts down on drying time. If you have to walk across a carpet and water pools around your feet, stop and extract first.
Air Movers are essential to successful carpet drying. Ideally, you should use low-profile centrifugal units placed under the edge of the carpet. These flatten out against the floor and dry padding and subfloor directly. Position one unit in every corner angled toward the carpet at 45 degrees. Additional units can be added every 8-10 feet along the longest wall.
Once your air movers are in place, fire up a Dehumidifier. Leaving a dehumidifier off while drying carpet is like throwing away your investment in air movers. Moisture extract from the carpet is pulled into the air and needs to go somewhere. Otherwise, your room humidity will climb and drying time will soar. Keep RH under 50% for optimal drying time.
Finally, invest in a good moisture meter. Try to avoid lifting the carpet whenever possible. Use a non-invasive meter to monitor the padding and subfloor. Readings should decrease every time you check. Carpet moisture should be below 10%. Midair humidity should be under 50%.
Pick Equipment Based on the Material
Every material reacts differently to water and requires a unique drying approach. Concrete is porous and requires specialized dehumidifiers and patience. Timber surfaces dry quickly but can hide moisture within the wood. The carpet traps moisture beneath the floor you see. Only by evaluating what you are drying, and target moisture levels can you pick the right tools for the job.
The correct mix of equipment is not universal across materials. Knowledge of each material’s properties and how they interact with water is the secret to every restoration professionals successful drying jobs.
Case study: Basement Science Experiment
Building Science Corporation researchers tested various wall materials’ abilities to dry over several years in a basement space between concrete and wood framing that were insulated and air sealed.
Situation: They observed multiple basement wall assemblies utilizing various applications of polyethylene (plastic) vapor barriers, fiberglass, and foam.
Results: When they applied a heavy plastic vapor barrier (a.k.a. “perfect” barrier) to the interior side of the wall, water vapor from moist concrete was essentially trapped inside. During summer months indoor warm air migrated towards the cool wall, hit that plastic sheeting and condensed.
“What Works” Outcome: The experiment validated the theory that building materials marketed as “impermeable” typically cause more headaches than relief. The basement walls that performed the best (i.e. remained the driest) were assemblies that utilized semi-permeable materials (think building paper, certain foams) that allowed the wall to dry to the inside.
“Moral of story”: If you encapsulate a porous material such as concrete with a vapor barrier labeled “zero-perm” you have now created a breeding ground for mold.
Proven Working Source – https://buildingscience.com/sites/default/files/migrate/pdf/RR-0906_Field_Monitoring_Hygrothermal_Modeling_Basement_Insulation.pdf
More questions?
Why does concrete take so much longer to dry than wood or carpet?
Concrete is like a big wet sponge except it’s really hard. There are millions of tiny “capillary” tubes inside concrete that absorb water. Timber and carpet may feel dry within a few days but concrete can take months to fully purge its inner moisture reserves. If you seal it with a plastic floor (vinyl, epoxy, etc) too soon that vapor will literally “blow” the adhesive off the floor causing bubbles and eventual flooring failure.
Can I speed up the drying of my wood floors with a space heater?
Yes and no. Heat rises and hot air = evaporation. BUT if you “blast” timber with too much heat it will try to dry too fast. Dryness causes wood to contract. When wood floors “check” (crack) or crown (edges shrink but middle does not) you’ve defeated the purpose of drying. You want even airflow and low humidity levels in the room so that timber can dry at its own rate. Think “babying” not “hot.air”;
My carpets feel dry. How come they still smell like wet dogs?
Okay this is carpet “dirty little secret”. The top fibers of carpet dry relatively fast since they are exposed to air. However underneath all that fluffy goodness is a gigantic sponge called padding. If you don’t rent a high-powered air mover that can force air underneath the carpet padding your portion will remain wet. After about 48 hours bacteria will begin to colonize that dark moist environment……smellshop tells us that is where that funky “wet dog” smell originates.
What’s the difference between a “Pin” and “Pinless” meter?
Pinless meters are best described as a scanner. You swipe them over a surface (tile, drywall) and the unit emits electromagnetic waves that detect “hot spots” without leaving any holes. Pin type meters literally have 2 metal pins you poke into the material. These are more accurate on timber since they detect electrical resistance between the pins. This allows you to know what percentage of moisture is deep inside the wood grain vs just on the surface.
Do I really need to rent one of those expensive “Desiccant” dehumidifiers?
Yup. If you are trying to dry out a concrete slab, crawl space or giant meat-locker basement then you want one of these bad boys. Residential “refrigerant” dehumidifiers (the ones your local warehouse sells) become less efficient when the air is cool or super dry. Desiccant dehumidifiers use a chemical “drying wheel” that absorbs moisture even in freezing conditions. They are the “heavy hitters” for extracting moisture from porous materials.






