I learned a difficult lesson with moisture under the floor. A little long, bear with me...
I had noticed moisture in the basement but blew it off to spillage or seepage or whatever. Bad me.
Background - I'm hard on my equipment, 4X4, rough roads, etc. One time I got into a tight dead-end and while doing a multi-point turn a backed fully into a bush - but not a bush, a brush-covered stump. Water immediately began pouring out the plumbing hatch, the corner I hit. I had cracked the glass and the water was the draining of the grey water tank. I went home.
I had to cut the floor open to get at the tank. What I found was disheartening to say the least. My impact had sheared the drain line at the tank. Worse was that I found the tank, with a play in it's "bay" had roughly a 1/4" play all around and in my adventures two of three inlets had broken and were misaligned. The three inlets were the lav sink, kitchen sink and the vent to the roof. I had been feeding that tank about 1/2, the remainder being the seepage to the basement. It's fixed now, the tank fittings, with expanding foam used to buffer the tank from movement and the hole in the floor covered by carpet. The subfloor is still a mess.
The lesson is to investigate any suspicious water immediately.
1999 PSD F-350 SRW K&N, Sys-1, Ride-Rite
2005 Northern Lite 10.2CD "Special Edition"
2004 XL650L
GSX1100G, VS700 (Hers), 53 Belair (Hers), Z50R
More girls than I ever hoped for...(mom + 2 lovely daughters)