DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   Rigid foam board insulation (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/174762-rigid-foam-board-insulation.html)

LM September 4th 06 03:00 AM

Rigid foam board insulation
 
I'm replacing my siding and find lots of gaps in the fiberglass inulation
(in-wall). I am thinking of adding foam boards to the exterior walls to
better seal them and add little insulation. Going by R-value, this doesn't
add much (1/2" R4) but maybe this would protect better against winds etc. I
am installing hardie plank siding. Will this home 'breath' ?
ventilation? Anyone has experience with this type of insulation?

Luke



JimL September 4th 06 06:00 AM

Rigid foam board insulation
 
On Mon, 04 Sep 2006 02:00:25 GMT, "LM" wrote:

I'm replacing my siding and find lots of gaps in the fiberglass inulation
(in-wall). I am thinking of adding foam boards to the exterior walls to
better seal them and add little insulation. Going by R-value, this doesn't
add much (1/2" R4) but maybe this would protect better against winds etc. I
am installing hardie plank siding. Will this home 'breath' ?
ventilation? Anyone has experience with this type of insulation?

Luke

If you are replacing siding then don't even think about breathing
problems. I promise, you have lots of breating going on, even if you
wrap it twice.



m Ransley September 4th 06 01:10 PM

Rigid foam board insulation
 
You won`t get R4 per 1/2" out of any board I know of, R7.2" new and
stabilised at R6+" is the best Polyisosyanurate gets. I covered my
house in 2" polyiso for R 14.4. Can you replace siding on a soft surface
and not over nail it making it uneven? I covered mine in Osb.


John McGaw September 4th 06 03:07 PM

Rigid foam board insulation
 
m Ransley wrote:
You won`t get R4 per 1/2" out of any board I know of, R7.2" new and
stabilised at R6+" is the best Polyisosyanurate gets. I covered my
house in 2" polyiso for R 14.4. Can you replace siding on a soft surface
and not over nail it making it uneven? I covered mine in Osb.


1/2" Dow blue foam board is R3 and that is the best I could find when I
searched for materials for my basement remodel. Perhaps one of the
foil-faced types might do better but I don't recall any.

--
John McGaw
[Knoxville, TN, USA]
http://johnmcgaw.com

Eric in North TX September 4th 06 03:19 PM

Rigid foam board insulation
 

I tried just about every brand a few years ago on a west wall I
rebuilt, the blue board won as somewhat effective, the foil covered
white crap is landfill. Only the blue board is only slightly more
effective than an empty space even when fitted with surgical precision.
A poorly fitted R-13 fiberglass did much better. I've ripped most of it
out and replaced it with R-16 fiberglass. The blue has its uses, and I
would use it again, it has the advantage of being softer and tighter so
accurate cuts can be made with out the shattering and crumbling the
white stuff does. Any place the bats will fit, isn't one of its uses.


Tom The Great September 4th 06 05:08 PM

Rigid foam board insulation
 
On Mon, 04 Sep 2006 02:00:25 GMT, "LM" wrote:

I'm replacing my siding and find lots of gaps in the fiberglass inulation
(in-wall). I am thinking of adding foam boards to the exterior walls to
better seal them and add little insulation. Going by R-value, this doesn't
add much (1/2" R4) but maybe this would protect better against winds etc. I
am installing hardie plank siding. Will this home 'breath' ?
ventilation? Anyone has experience with this type of insulation?

Luke



R value sounds a little high for 1/2", but reguardless these R values
are under 'ideal' conditions. Meaning as you pound down the nails,
the insulation becomes damage. It does seem to help ensure your
building envelope is increased. If you really want to reduce windy
effects, might want to take the time to use a properly installed house
wrap.

I heard on one DIY show, drafts account for the majority of heat loss
in a home, followed closely by poor insulation.

Do your self a favor and take this time to get some professional
advice. The cost of fuel is ever increasing, and a few bucks to a
professional energy advisor might help in the long run.

Also, follow up with what you did, atleast I'm curious the end result.

imho,

tom @ www.FreelancingProjects.com



m Ransley September 4th 06 05:32 PM

Rigid foam board insulation
 
1/2" Blue Dow is stated on the board R2.5


LM September 4th 06 08:33 PM

Rigid foam board insulation
 
Actually, the R value for the board I wanted to use, is about 7.2 per inch,
3.6 per 1/2".
I decided to use a felt paper instead of Tyvek. Installing it right is the
key :)
Thanks for all replies.
Luke
"Tom The Great" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 04 Sep 2006 02:00:25 GMT, "LM" wrote:

I'm replacing my siding and find lots of gaps in the fiberglass inulation
(in-wall). I am thinking of adding foam boards to the exterior walls to
better seal them and add little insulation. Going by R-value, this doesn't
add much (1/2" R4) but maybe this would protect better against winds etc.
I
am installing hardie plank siding. Will this home 'breath' ?
ventilation? Anyone has experience with this type of insulation?

Luke



R value sounds a little high for 1/2", but reguardless these R values
are under 'ideal' conditions. Meaning as you pound down the nails,
the insulation becomes damage. It does seem to help ensure your
building envelope is increased. If you really want to reduce windy
effects, might want to take the time to use a properly installed house
wrap.

I heard on one DIY show, drafts account for the majority of heat loss
in a home, followed closely by poor insulation.

Do your self a favor and take this time to get some professional
advice. The cost of fuel is ever increasing, and a few bucks to a
professional energy advisor might help in the long run.

Also, follow up with what you did, atleast I'm curious the end result.

imho,

tom @ www.FreelancingProjects.com






All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:34 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter