Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Home Repair (alt.home.repair) For all homeowners and DIYers with many experienced tradesmen. Solve your toughest home fix-it problems. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Our 40 year old home has a mixture of insulation in the attic. 2/3 of the
attic has blown in cellulose, and the other 1/3 has fiberglass batt's that were added during renovation work. Can I blow in additional cellulose over the whole area. If not, why? |
#2
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Kyle Boatright wrote: Our 40 year old home has a mixture of insulation in the attic. 2/3 of the attic has blown in cellulose, and the other 1/3 has fiberglass batt's that were added during renovation work. Can I blow in additional cellulose over the whole area. If not, why? yes you can blow cellulose over the fiberglass. |
#3
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() marson wrote: Kyle Boatright wrote: Our 40 year old home has a mixture of insulation in the attic. 2/3 of the attic has blown in cellulose, and the other 1/3 has fiberglass batt's that were added during renovation work. Can I blow in additional cellulose over the whole area. If not, why? yes you can blow cellulose over the fiberglass. Marson may not agree but I think blow in sucks if you ever have to work up there again.... I like f/g batts / roll / blankets best. cheers Bob |
#4
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "BobK207" wrote in message ups.com... marson wrote: Kyle Boatright wrote: Our 40 year old home has a mixture of insulation in the attic. 2/3 of the attic has blown in cellulose, and the other 1/3 has fiberglass batt's that were added during renovation work. Can I blow in additional cellulose over the whole area. If not, why? yes you can blow cellulose over the fiberglass. Marson may not agree but I think blow in sucks if you ever have to work up there again.... No doubt about that, but what I really wanted to get at was whether there was any major downside to blown in over batts from the perspective of insulation value. If there isn't, I plan to "top off" the settled cellulose between our rafters in the area where we store things, then reattach the decking on top of it. I figure that's probably 250 sf of the 1,000+ sf attic. I'll have another 8" or so of cellulose blown in elsewhere and may put down a couple of boards to facilitate walk paths for future maintenance before the new blown in material goes in. KB I like f/g batts / roll / blankets best. cheers Bob |
#5
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Kyle Boatright wrote:
"BobK207" wrote in message ups.com... marson wrote: Kyle Boatright wrote: Our 40 year old home has a mixture of insulation in the attic. 2/3 of the attic has blown in cellulose, and the other 1/3 has fiberglass batt's that were added during renovation work. Can I blow in additional cellulose over the whole area. If not, why? yes you can blow cellulose over the fiberglass. Marson may not agree but I think blow in sucks if you ever have to work up there again.... No doubt about that, but what I really wanted to get at was whether there was any major downside to blown in over batts from the perspective of insulation value. Over time, blown in cellulose insulation can/will settle down due to gravity ( reducing the air pockets between the cellulose ) and thus their insulating property will/can degrade over time. Fiberglass batts are more likely than blown in cellulose to maintain their insulating qualities over time. Installing fiberglass batts takes less skill to install and less equipment than blown-in cellulose thus making it a better DIY weekend project. ISTM - the current cost differential between blown in cellulose vs. fiberglass batts for most residential homes is not substantial enough to warrant it as a decisive factor. Fiberglass batts insulations are maintance free; blown in cellulose insulation will require that one add/redo cellulose insulation periodically to maintain its insulating properties. I removed my attic blown in cellulose insulation (R20-R30) because it was settling down due to gravity and it was losing its insulating quality. I replaced it with new fiberglass batt insulation last fall (R38 - the highest R rating available locally and the thickest batt my attic could handle uniformly). DOE has a new insulation standard for new construction now ( see page 6 and 7 in the U.S.DOE "Energy Saver$" booklet at http://www.eere.energy.gov/consumer/ or ask for the booklet by calling 1-877-EERE-INF, 1-877-337-3463). Older home may not have enough space along the edge of the attic to hold uniformly more than R-38 of fiberglass batts (12"-14" deep ceiling/attic cavities) so the higher U.S. DOE recommended R-rating attic insulation standards may not be viable -atleast using fiberglass batts. Stryofoam panels take up less space than fiberglass give the same insulating property so stryofoam panels could provide a higher level of insulation given the same space limitations in older homes. However, a stryofoam panels insulation project is going to cost significantly more. HTH, Walter If there isn't, I plan to "top off" the settled cellulose between our rafters in the area where we store things, then reattach the decking on top of it. I figure that's probably 250 sf of the 1,000+ sf attic. I'll have another 8" or so of cellulose blown in elsewhere and may put down a couple of boards to facilitate walk paths for future maintenance before the new blown in material goes in. KB I like f/g batts / roll / blankets best. cheers Bob |
#6
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#7
![]()
Posted to alt.home.repair
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Kyle Boatright wrote:
Marson may not agree but I think blow in sucks if you ever have to work up there again.... No doubt about that, but what I really wanted to get at was whether there was any major downside to blown in over batts from the perspective of insulation value. No that is the only issue I know of. If I decide to add more, I will blow it in myself. I have both in there now. The blown in stuff tends to fill in small spaces and block air infiltration as well so you come out ahead on the insulation end. -- Joseph Meehan Dia 's Muire duit |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
blown-in insulation vs. batts | Home Repair | |||
Cellulose insulation ok? | Home Repair | |||
Starbucks ceiling insulation batts | Home Repair | |||
insulation batts, blankets & other ?'s ... | Woodworking | |||
insulation batts, blankets & other ?'s ... | Home Repair |