Water drops all over the insulation
The condensation is clearly visible all over this insulation. It has become stringy and completely soaked.
Testing the moisture content of the fiberglass insulation
The moisture meter is showing that the insulation is at 90% saturation. This means that the insulation is effective a sponge. It has soaked up about as much water from that air that it can handle. Completely ruined.
Falling insulation
Large pieces of the insulation has fallen all the way out of its cavity and is now soaking up a puddle. Not only is it doing nothing to insulate the house, but it is now a breeding ground for bugs and mold.
Wet insulation up against the wooden support beams
Wood is used to build most homes. What happens when wood get too wet? This is the kind of situation that creates sagging floors, drywall cracks upstairs, and other foundation issues.
Nasty Insulation
No wonder the floors are cold, most of the insulation is either falling down or soaked through.
Moisture content of the wood
See how wet the wood looks in this picture? The inspector was shocked to see that he could push his figure against it and squeeze water out. If the insulation had not been trapping water up against it for so long, it might not have been damaged as much.
Jungle of nasty insulation
Sometimes the insulation gets so stringy and nasty that its like crawling through a jungle. At this point there really is no change of salvage. It is time to remove it and get the proper insulation installed.