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TKM January 3rd 08 03:07 PM

What Kind of Insulation for Furnace Room?
 
What kind of insulation materials should I use to insulate the hot-air pipes
and ceiling in a furnace room?

The house is about 5 years old with 6 inches of blown-in cellulose
insulation in the walls and ceilings. The furnace room is on the second
floor and has a finished drywall ceiling and walls. But the room is very
warm during the winter and snow on the roof above the furnace room melts
before the snow on the rest of the roof.

I've sealed the furnace pipe joints with mastic to stop hot-air leaks; but
now I'd like to wrap the pipes with insulation and add a layer of ceiling
insulation inside the room and maybe the outside wall too.

TKM




ransley January 3rd 08 03:56 PM

What Kind of Insulation for Furnace Room?
 
On Jan 3, 9:07*am, "TKM" wrote:
What kind of insulation materials should I use to insulate the hot-air pipes
and ceiling in *a furnace room?

The house is about 5 years old with 6 inches of blown-in cellulose
insulation in the walls and ceilings. *The furnace room is on the second
floor and has a finished drywall ceiling and walls. *But the room is very
warm during the winter and snow on the roof above the furnace room melts
before the snow on the rest of the roof.

I've sealed the furnace pipe joints with mastic to stop hot-air leaks; but
now I'd like to wrap the pipes with insulation and add a layer of ceiling
insulation inside the room and maybe the outside wall too.

Is there a return in that room so that can recover some of the wasted heat, is it a unit that uses outside air for combustion. How can you have 6" of wall insulation in 2x4 construction. 6" in the attic is only maybe R 21. I dont know where you live but R 21 is not much. My fire code specifys 5/8 drywall firecode x for any furnace room for the interior finish.


Jeff January 3rd 08 06:03 PM

What Kind of Insulation for Furnace Room?
 
Think about it. The heat in the furnace room must go somewhere. If the
room is too well insulated it will get hotter and hotter until the heat loss
equals the heat from the furnace walls. This will cause the furnace to be
hotter, maybe shortening the life of the motor. You might put a small
opening in the inlet duct to draw house air into the furnace, making sure
there is space under the door for the air to flow in.


"TKM" wrote in message
...
What kind of insulation materials should I use to insulate the hot-air
pipes
and ceiling in a furnace room?

The house is about 5 years old with 6 inches of blown-in cellulose
insulation in the walls and ceilings. The furnace room is on the second
floor and has a finished drywall ceiling and walls. But the room is very
warm during the winter and snow on the roof above the furnace room melts
before the snow on the rest of the roof.

I've sealed the furnace pipe joints with mastic to stop hot-air leaks; but
now I'd like to wrap the pipes with insulation and add a layer of ceiling
insulation inside the room and maybe the outside wall too.

TKM






TKM January 3rd 08 07:13 PM

What Kind of Insulation for Furnace Room?
 

"ransley" wrote in message
...
On Jan 3, 9:07 am, "TKM" wrote:
What kind of insulation materials should I use to insulate the hot-air
pipes
and ceiling in a furnace room?

The house is about 5 years old with 6 inches of blown-in cellulose
insulation in the walls and ceilings. The furnace room is on the second
floor and has a finished drywall ceiling and walls. But the room is very
warm during the winter and snow on the roof above the furnace room melts
before the snow on the rest of the roof.

I've sealed the furnace pipe joints with mastic to stop hot-air leaks; but
now I'd like to wrap the pipes with insulation and add a layer of ceiling
insulation inside the room and maybe the outside wall too.

Is there a return in that room so that can recover some of the wasted
heat, is it a unit that uses outside air for combustion. How can you have
6" of wall insulation in 2x4 construction. 6" in the attic is only maybe R
21. I dont know where you live but R 21 is not much. My fire code specifys
5/8 drywall firecode x for any furnace room for the interior finish.



Good points. There is no system air return in the furnace room, so that's
an excellent idea.

The furnace uses outside air for combusion. The walls are 2x6 construction
as is the ceiling. 6" is the mimimum ceiling insulation thickness as the
roof meets the eave right above the furnace room. In other areas of the
ceiling, the insulation thickness is several inches more (as much as the
contractor could blow in). The drywall is 5/8". The furnace room door
(bathroom adjoining) is louvered. I leave that door open to increase air
circulation

What I think I'll do is put a small flexible vent pipe into the air return
plenum with the end of that pipe at the ceiling level. That will draw off
the hot air rising from the furnace and pipes. But, I'd still like to know
which insulation materials to use for those pipes and for another layer on
the ceiling. The ceiling material, of course, should meet fire code
requirements.

TKM



EXT January 5th 08 07:45 PM

What Kind of Insulation for Furnace Room?
 

"Jeff" wrote in message
...
Think about it. The heat in the furnace room must go somewhere. If the
room is too well insulated it will get hotter and hotter until the heat
loss equals the heat from the furnace walls. This will cause the furnace
to be hotter, maybe shortening the life of the motor. You might put a
small opening in the inlet duct to draw house air into the furnace, making
sure there is space under the door for the air to flow in.


First check your local codes about the benefits of installing a return vent
in a furnace room. It may not be legal because of the potential of creating
negative air pressure in the room resulting in the flames not staying where
their supposed to be in the furnace, and the possibility of drawing carbon
monoxide and/or even natural gas or propane into the household air
distribution ducts if there should be a leak.




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