Moisture penetrates even the most carefully installed and sealed exterior siding in several ways.
Water wicking up siding.
I live on a lot with high water table and a lot of shade.
I m thinking that the water tank condensation is the problem or a leaking water tank.
Is the floor around the tank wet.
The top t 111 panel should be installed about 1 4 inch off the shelf formed by the flashing to prevent moisture from wicking up into the wood.
Since water runs downward unless it s being driven by strong winds the standard method for creating water resistant vinyl cladding is to start at the bottom and work up.
I am not interested in a recirculating system will.
However i am a bit skeptical about the effectiveness of using wicking action to move water up to the top of an aquaponic system.
I don t think moving water back up to the top of an aquaponic system is possible with wicking.
Obviously such forms of capillarity can be hard to observe until serious damage has already occurred.
My home is on a slab too and water does not wick up from the slab into the outside plywood.
Each successive siding.
When siding is put back behind the gutter the lowest piece of flashing running down the pitch of the roof above must be fashioned to divert water into the gutter not behind the siding.
The reason it should not be over the ice and water shield roofwrap is any water running down that barrier under the roofing due to a leak or blow in would then run down the bottom of the dripedge and end up wicking into under the roof sheathing just like if there was no dripedge there at all.
All the ones i have seen use a pump to do the job.
Between water infiltration in the siding seam is.
Wood s end grain can wick water the same way up down or sideways.
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Rain water striking the side of the house will run down the siding to the edge.
So you can probably rule out the wicking scenario.
A common example is a bubble of water climbing up the inside of a thin straw.