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-   -   Installing foil backed insullation board. Options (Continued ...) (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/228990-installing-foil-backed-insullation-board-options-continued.html)

sid January 7th 08 07:19 PM

Installing foil backed insullation board. Options (Continued ...)
 
My final plan is to use 2" Owens Pink, then wood studded walls with
un-
faced fiberglass and a wood planking as the wall surface. (all that
sound OK?)
I looked up the building regs from the city and they recommend an
outlet every 6' along the wall.(that sounds like a lot). It did not
mention GFI, but I would install them anyway.

Is the difference between 2" and 1" really going to be noticed ?


Do I need to be concerned what type of floor covering I should be
using right now ? or just wait until the walls are finished and then
look at something like berber (glued) ?


Any comments ?



John Grabowski January 7th 08 09:08 PM

Installing foil backed insullation board. Options (Continued ...)
 

"sid" wrote in message
...
My final plan is to use 2" Owens Pink, then wood studded walls with
un-
faced fiberglass and a wood planking as the wall surface. (all that
sound OK?)
I looked up the building regs from the city and they recommend an
outlet every 6' along the wall.(that sounds like a lot). It did not
mention GFI, but I would install them anyway.

Is the difference between 2" and 1" really going to be noticed ?


Do I need to be concerned what type of floor covering I should be
using right now ? or just wait until the walls are finished and then
look at something like berber (glued) ?



An outlet every 6' is a lot. Generally speaking, to be code compliant they
should only be 12' apart although it is a good idea to go a little less.
You might want to confirm with the electrical inspector before you start.
GFI's are usually not required in the finished portion of the basement, but
every unfinished part must have at least one GFI receptacle.


ransley January 7th 08 09:56 PM

Installing foil backed insullation board. Options (Continued ...)
 
On Jan 7, 1:19*pm, sid wrote:
My final plan is to use 2" Owens Pink, then wood studded walls with
un-
faced fiberglass and a wood planking as the wall surface. *(all that
sound OK?)
I looked up the building regs from the city and they recommend an
outlet every 6' along the wall.(that sounds like a lot). It did not
mention GFI, but I would install them anyway.

Is the difference between 2" and 1" really going to be noticed ?

Do I need to be concerned what type of floor covering I should be
using right now ? *or just wait until the walls are finished and then
look at something like berber (glued) ?

Any comments ?


There are foam boards that allow moisture through , try Owens Corning
and cellotex.

sid January 7th 08 10:22 PM

Installing foil backed insullation board. Options (Continued ...)
 
On Jan 7, 3:56*pm, ransley wrote:
On Jan 7, 1:19*pm, sid wrote:

My final plan is to use 2" Owens Pink, then wood studded walls with
un-
faced fiberglass and a wood planking as the wall surface. *(all that
sound OK?)
I looked up the building regs from the city and they recommend an
outlet every 6' along the wall.(that sounds like a lot). It did not
mention GFI, but I would install them anyway.


Is the difference between 2" and 1" really going to be noticed ?


Do I need to be concerned what type of floor covering I should be
using right now ? *or just wait until the walls are finished and then
look at something like berber (glued) ?


Any comments ?


There are foam boards that allow moisture through , try Owens Corning
and cellotex.


What about the flooring ? Will the type of flooring that I choose
later on play any roll in the construction of the walls ?

dadiOH January 8th 08 12:55 PM

Installing foil backed insullation board. Options (Continued ...)
 
sid wrote:

What about the flooring ? Will the type of flooring that I choose
later on play any roll in the construction of the walls ?


Not if it is carpet, wood, laminate, vinyl, linoleum, tile, brick,
stone or paint.

--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico




DT January 8th 08 04:06 PM

Installing foil backed insullation board. Options (Continued ...)
 

I looked up the building regs from the city and they recommend an
outlet every 6' along the wall.(that sounds like a lot). It did not
mention GFI, but I would install them anyway.



The code reads that every point on a wall shall be within 6 feet of an outlet
without crossing a doorway. So one outlet every 12 feet meets code, a
somewhat closer spacing give you more flexibility and doesn't cost much.


--
Dennis


Robert Allison January 8th 08 05:00 PM

Installing foil backed insullation board. Options (Continued...)
 
DT wrote:
I looked up the building regs from the city and they recommend an
outlet every 6' along the wall.(that sounds like a lot). It did not
mention GFI, but I would install them anyway.




The code reads that every point on a wall shall be within 6 feet of an outlet
without crossing a doorway. So one outlet every 12 feet meets code, a
somewhat closer spacing give you more flexibility and doesn't cost much.



It is often referred to as the 12/6/2 rule. Outlets should be
placed within 6' of a doorway, 12' to the next outlet, and
every wall segment 2' or longer should have an outlet.
Spacing is measured along the bottom of the wall. Different
for kitchens, bathrooms, foyers, and counterspace.

--
Robert Allison
Rimshot, Inc.
Georgetown, TX

sid January 9th 08 01:40 PM

Installing foil backed insullation board. Options (Continued ...)
 
On Jan 8, 11:00*am, Robert Allison wrote:
DT wrote:
I looked up the building regs from the city and they recommend an
outlet every 6' along the wall.(that sounds like a lot). It did not
mention GFI, but I would install them anyway.


The code reads that every point on a wall shall be within 6 feet of an outlet
without crossing a doorway. So one outlet every 12 feet meets code, a
somewhat closer spacing give you more flexibility and doesn't cost much.


It is often referred to as the 12/6/2 rule. *Outlets should be
placed within 6' of a doorway, 12' to the next outlet, and
every wall segment 2' or longer should have an outlet.
Spacing is measured along the bottom of the wall. *Different
for kitchens, bathrooms, foyers, and counterspace.

--
Robert Allison *
Rimshot, Inc.
Georgetown, TX


Do/should all of the sockets be GFI ? I have herd of using GFI
breakers on the circuit, would that be as safe and/or compliant ?

I purchased a sheet of Owens Pink. when I placed it against the wall,
I noticed that there is a lot of concrete burrs and nipples left over
from the forms that were used to poor the walls. Should I attempt to
work around those or can I remove them somehow ?

Thanks


Robert Allison January 9th 08 04:46 PM

Installing foil backed insullation board. Options (Continued...)
 
sid wrote:

On Jan 8, 11:00 am, Robert Allison wrote:

DT wrote:

I looked up the building regs from the city and they recommend an
outlet every 6' along the wall.(that sounds like a lot). It did not
mention GFI, but I would install them anyway.


The code reads that every point on a wall shall be within 6 feet of an outlet
without crossing a doorway. So one outlet every 12 feet meets code, a
somewhat closer spacing give you more flexibility and doesn't cost much.


It is often referred to as the 12/6/2 rule. Outlets should be
placed within 6' of a doorway, 12' to the next outlet, and
every wall segment 2' or longer should have an outlet.
Spacing is measured along the bottom of the wall. Different
for kitchens, bathrooms, foyers, and counterspace.

--
Robert Allison
Rimshot, Inc.
Georgetown, TX



Do/should all of the sockets be GFI ? I have herd of using GFI
breakers on the circuit, would that be as safe and/or compliant ?

I purchased a sheet of Owens Pink. when I placed it against the wall,
I noticed that there is a lot of concrete burrs and nipples left over
from the forms that were used to poor the walls. Should I attempt to
work around those or can I remove them somehow ?

Thanks


I don't know that much about basement GFIs as we don't have
basements down here, but it is my understanding that if the
basement is finished, GFCIs are not required. If a GFCI IS
needed for protection on the outlets down there, then the
first outlet on the circuit needs to be a GFCI and it can
protect the downstream outlets. A GFCI breaker can protect
the entire circuit. Either way is compliant IF it is needed.
I will leave it to the experts familiar with basements to
answer the "IF it is needed" question, for sure.

--
Robert Allison
Rimshot, Inc.
Georgetown, TX


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