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jeffc September 24th 06 04:43 PM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 
There is exposed fiberglass insulation in my attic (in other words, paper
side out, exposed fiberglass side in). I'd like to cover some areas of
frequent use so there is no exposure to our skin as we touch it. Ideas?



nowforsale September 24th 06 05:30 PM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 
"jeffc" wrote in message
m...
There is exposed fiberglass insulation in my attic (in other words, paper
side out, exposed fiberglass side in). I'd like to cover some areas of
frequent use so there is no exposure to our skin as we touch it. Ideas?


as opposed to skin exposure, you might be breathing it in

fiberglass is a known carcinogen (produces cancer) and required to be
labeled as such in the usa

fiberglass fibers are microscopic and cannot be seen, except for maybe
looking in the area when it is completely dark with a flashlight and seeing
the floating fibers in the light beam, they look shiny

if you must have frequent use of an area with exposed fiberglass, wearing
breathing masks is an idea, and if you want to cover the fiberglass to
minimize touch exposure, an idea is using nonflammable plastic perforated
with tiny holes so the fiberglass can breathe, which minimizes mold etc.

another idea would be remove the fiberglass entirely and use environmentally
safe insulation, like recycled cotton insulation treated with
environmentally safe pesticide and mold/fungus repellant, or sheep wool if
you have the bucks,,,cellulose is another idea



[email protected] September 24th 06 05:50 PM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 

jeffc wrote:
There is exposed fiberglass insulation in my attic (in other words, paper
side out, exposed fiberglass side in). I'd like to cover some areas of
frequent use so there is no exposure to our skin as we touch it. Ideas?


You don't say whether the exposed insulation is in roof / ceiling,
walls, or floor.
The rest of the building is most probably insulated.
The insulation covered with standard building materials.
You can do the same.
TB


[email protected] September 24th 06 06:33 PM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 
if you are up there alot or use it for storage, I would wall over the
insuation with something even something cheap like fiberboard. you
don't want the dust getting on everything. if it is not for storage and
you are just meandering through for no reason stop. if it covers the
floor only, replace it with blown insuation or some other such and put
down a few more inches while you are at it.

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jeffc wrote:
There is exposed fiberglass insulation in my attic (in other words, paper
side out, exposed fiberglass side in). I'd like to cover some areas of
frequent use so there is no exposure to our skin as we touch it. Ideas?



Tom The Great September 24th 06 08:50 PM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 
On Sun, 24 Sep 2006 15:43:03 GMT, "jeffc" wrote:

There is exposed fiberglass insulation in my attic (in other words, paper
side out, exposed fiberglass side in). I'd like to cover some areas of
frequent use so there is no exposure to our skin as we touch it. Ideas?



If you are walking over your insulation, as in it's between the top
most floor's ceiling and the floor of the attic, you might have it
installed incorrectyl.

Now if it's on semi finished walls in your attic, I've seen people put
up like 6 mil poly to keep dust down, and it will work as a vapor and
draft barrior.

Just guessing, since I can't see your installation. Got photos? :)

later,

tom @ www.FindMeShelter.com



JoeSpareBedroom September 24th 06 09:05 PM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 
What is the purpose of that ugly HTML code in every message you post? Do you
realize it does NOT show as pretty web content for the majority of newsgroup
users?






wrote in message
oups.com...

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jeffc wrote:
There is exposed fiberglass insulation in my attic (in other words, paper
side out, exposed fiberglass side in). I'd like to cover some areas of
frequent use so there is no exposure to our skin as we touch it. Ideas?





Mark Lloyd September 24th 06 11:26 PM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 
On Sun, 24 Sep 2006 20:05:42 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"
wrote:

What is the purpose of that ugly HTML code in every message you post? Do you
realize it does NOT show as pretty web content for the majority of newsgroup
users?



One of the things it took me a long time to learn, is that some people
do things just to be annoying.





wrote in message
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href=http://www.gamestotal.com/Strategy Games/abra
href=http://uc.gamestotal.com/Unification Wars/a - a
href=http://uc.gamestotal.com/Massive Multiplayer Online
Games/abra href=http://gc.gamestotal.com/Galactic Conquest/a -
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href=http://www.gamestotal.com/Strategy Games/abra
href=http://uc.gamestotal.com/Unification Wars/a - a
href=http://uc.gamestotal.com/Massive Multiplayer Online
Games/abra href=http://gc.gamestotal.com/Galactic Conquest/a -
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href=http://www.stephenyong.com/kingsofchaos.htmKings of chaos/abr




jeffc wrote:
There is exposed fiberglass insulation in my attic (in other words, paper
side out, exposed fiberglass side in). I'd like to cover some areas of
frequent use so there is no exposure to our skin as we touch it. Ideas?



--
92 days until the winter solstice celebration

Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.laughingsquid.com

"The government of the United States is not, in
any sense, founded on the Christian religion."
-- George Washington

HeyBub September 24th 06 11:49 PM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 
nowforsale wrote:
"jeffc" wrote in message
m...
There is exposed fiberglass insulation in my attic (in other words,
paper side out, exposed fiberglass side in). I'd like to cover some
areas of frequent use so there is no exposure to our skin as we
touch it. Ideas?


as opposed to skin exposure, you might be breathing it in

fiberglass is a known carcinogen (produces cancer) and required to be
labeled as such in the usa


Fiberglass is not a "known" carcinogen and, while labeling as such is
required by OSHA, they don't know squat and the data on which their
requirement was based is hoplessly out of date.

The American Lung Association says:

"The IARC [Intl Agency for Research on Cancer] working group revised their
previous classification of glass wool being a possible carcinogen. It is
currently considered not classifiable as a human carcinogen. Studies done in
the past 15 years since the previous report was released, do not provide
enough evidence to link this material to any cancer risk."

http://www.lungusa.org/site/pp.asp?c=dvLUK9O0E&b=35439


another idea would be remove the fiberglass entirely and use
environmentally safe insulation, like recycled cotton insulation
treated with environmentally safe pesticide and mold/fungus
repellant, or sheep wool if you have the bucks,,,cellulose is another
idea


All of which are flammable. Might as well use straw or crumpled newspaper.



JoeSpareBedroom September 24th 06 11:54 PM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 
"HeyBub" wrote in message
...
nowforsale wrote:
"jeffc" wrote in message
m...
There is exposed fiberglass insulation in my attic (in other words,
paper side out, exposed fiberglass side in). I'd like to cover some
areas of frequent use so there is no exposure to our skin as we
touch it. Ideas?


as opposed to skin exposure, you might be breathing it in

fiberglass is a known carcinogen (produces cancer) and required to be
labeled as such in the usa


Fiberglass is not a "known" carcinogen and, while labeling as such is
required by OSHA, they don't know squat and the data on which their
requirement was based is hoplessly out of date.

The American Lung Association says:

"The IARC [Intl Agency for Research on Cancer] working group revised their
previous classification of glass wool being a possible carcinogen. It is
currently considered not classifiable as a human carcinogen. Studies done
in the past 15 years since the previous report was released, do not
provide enough evidence to link this material to any cancer risk."

http://www.lungusa.org/site/pp.asp?c=dvLUK9O0E&b=35439


Yeah, but it's still a really bad idea to breathe it.



jeffc September 24th 06 11:59 PM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
if it is not for storage and
you are just meandering through for no reason stop.


OK Dad. Yes, I was just "meandering through it" for no reason at all. The
only thing I can say is I get really wanked out on heroin and crack and just
start meandering around sometimes. I know that is no excuse though.



jeffc September 25th 06 12:01 AM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 

"Tom The Great" wrote in message
...
If you are walking over your insulation, as in it's between the top
most floor's ceiling and the floor of the attic, you might have it
installed incorrectyl.

Now if it's on semi finished walls in your attic, I've seen people put
up like 6 mil poly to keep dust down, and it will work as a vapor and
draft barrior.

Just guessing, since I can't see your installation. Got photos? :)


It's just regular wall insulation. Floor is covered with floorboards. I
just didn't know if a vapor barrier was acceptable or not. Someone else
mentioned perforating the covering.



nowforsale September 25th 06 04:05 AM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 
"HeyBub" wrote in message
...
nowforsale wrote:
"jeffc" wrote in message
m...
There is exposed fiberglass insulation in my attic (in other words,
paper side out, exposed fiberglass side in). I'd like to cover some
areas of frequent use so there is no exposure to our skin as we
touch it. Ideas?


as opposed to skin exposure, you might be breathing it in

fiberglass is a known carcinogen (produces cancer) and required to be
labeled as such in the usa


Fiberglass is not a "known" carcinogen and, while labeling as such is
required by OSHA, they don't know squat and the data on which their
requirement was based is hoplessly out of date.

The American Lung Association says:

"The IARC [Intl Agency for Research on Cancer] working group revised their
previous classification of glass wool being a possible carcinogen. It is
currently considered not classifiable as a human carcinogen. Studies done
in the past 15 years since the previous report was released, do not
provide enough evidence to link this material to any cancer risk."

http://www.lungusa.org/site/pp.asp?c=dvLUK9O0E&b=35439


another idea would be remove the fiberglass entirely and use
environmentally safe insulation, like recycled cotton insulation
treated with environmentally safe pesticide and mold/fungus
repellant, or sheep wool if you have the bucks,,,cellulose is another
idea


All of which are flammable. Might as well use straw or crumpled newspaper.



it is beneficial to the fiberglass industry that you contributed the above
comments in favor of fiberglass

here is information from just one of the almost 60,000 hits on google for
"fiberglass carcinogen" about fiberglass being a "potent carcinogen", noting
fiberglass is tiny pieces of glass, hardly something one wants to introduce
into their lungs or body by breathing or any other method

from http://consumerlawpage.com/article/c...n-toxics.shtml
[begin quote]
Fiberglass
Corning Fiberglas Company was formed in 1938, and only three years later, in
1941, evidence of pulmonary disease was reported by Walter J. Siebert, who
investigated the health of workers with the cooperation of Owens Corning.
Fiber glass is now used for thermal insulation of industrial buildings and
homes, as acoustic insulation, for fireproofing, as a reinforcing material
in plastics, cement, and textiles, in automotive components, in gaskets and
seals, in filters for air and fluids, and for many other miscellaneous uses.
More than 30,000 commercial products now contain fiber glass.

As asbestos has been phased out because of health concerns, fiber glass
production in the U.S. has been rising. In 1975, U.S. production of fiber
glass was 247.88 million kilograms (545.3 million pounds); by 1984 it had
risen to 632.88 million kilograms (1392.3 million pounds). If that rate of
growth (10.4% per year) held steady, then production of fiber glass in the
U.S. in 1995 would be 4365 million pounds.

Dr. Mearl F. Stanton of the National Cancer Institute found that glass
fibers less then 3 microns in diameter and greater than 20 microns in length
are "potent carcinogens" in rats; and, he said in 1974, "it is unlikely that
different mechanisms are operative in man." A micron is a millionth of a
meter (and a meter is about three feet). Fibers of this size not only cause
cancer in laboratory animals, but also cause changes in the activity and
chemical composition of cells, leading to changes in the genetic structure
in the cellular immune system.

In 1970, Dr. Stanton announced that "it is certain that in the pleura of the
rat, fibrous glass of small diameter is a potent carcinogen." The pleura is
the outer casing of the lungs; cancer of the pleura in humans is called
mesothelioma and it is caused by asbestos fibers. Stanton's research shows
that when glass fibers are manufactured as small as asbestos fibers, glass
causes cancer in laboratory animals just as asbestos does.

The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), of the World Health
Organization, listed fiber glass as a "probable [human] carcinogen" in 1987.
In 1990, the members of the U.S. National Toxicology Program
(NTP)representatives of 10 federal health agenciesconcluded unanimously
that fiber glass "may reasonably be anticipated to be a carcinogen" in
humans. In 1994, the U.S.Department of Health and Human Services reported to
Congress that fiber glass is "reasonably anticipated to be a carcinogen." In
the U.S., fiber glass must now be labeled a carcinogen.

It has been 25 years since researchers at the National Cancer Institute
concluded that fiber glass is a potent carcinogen in experimental animals.
Since then science has well documented the hazard. Ninety percent of
American homes now contain fiber glass insulation. All of this fiber glass
will eventually be released into the environment and cause significant
health hazards.
[end quote]

your comment on the flamability of cotton insulation, sheep wool, and
cellulose of "All of which are flammable. Might as well use straw or
crumpled newspaper." indicate you probably did not research the matter;
information on the combustibility of sheep wool (naturally fire retardant),
cotton insulation (treated with fire retardant), and cellulose insulation
(treated with fire retardant) is readily available through an internet
search



Michael Daly September 25th 06 05:15 AM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 
jeffc wrote:

just didn't know if a vapor barrier was acceptable or not.


That would depend on where you are located.

Mike

jeffc September 25th 06 05:24 AM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 

"Michael Daly" wrote in message
...
jeffc wrote:

just didn't know if a vapor barrier was acceptable or not.


That would depend on where you are located.


I'm located in central North Carolina.



DIYDon November 5th 17 03:14 AM

Covering fiberglass insulation?
 
replying to Tom The Great, DIYDon wrote:
Cover it with Tyvek or similar highly permeable air infiltration barrier.
Its pretty darn cheap and if stapled and taped, you may also get some heat
transfer reduction by reducing convection losses. (Theres highly regarded
data from a Canadian government lab showing that at very low temperatures,
fiberglass is porous enough to enable convection current to develop within the
insulation, drastically reducing effectivess. ........Probably more critical
of you live in Alberta😀.

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...on-149094-.htm




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