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On Jul 1, 11:35�am, Joe wrote:
On Jul 1, 10:56 am, "Bob F" wrote: wrote in message ... On Jul 1, 12:09 am, "Bob F" wrote: "Joe" wrote in message .... I have rock wool insulation stapled to the rafters of my cape cod built in 1952. It's in pretty good shape but I'm not sure if it should be replaced or augmented. My 2nd floor is always a degree or two colder than my 1st floor in the winter so I decided I'm in need of some insulation. I checked and noticed that where the dormers were added there is a lack of insulation. A handyman I had doing other work on my house said that the wool insulation is better than the fiberglass and I should keep it and just add some insulation to the knee joints near the dormers where it is lacking and that should be enough. I'd like to take care of this correctly so I'm wondering what the conventional wisdom of rock wool insulation is. Is there an R value for it? I assume that the area under the rafters is heated. If not, the insulation is normally between/above the joists at the top of the ceiling of the heated area. Well, it's a cape cod which means that the 2nd floor is basically the attic and the areas I'm talking about are the crawl spaces where there is no head room. They are generally closed off and used as storage space. The places where we have rock wool insulation are parallel to the heated living area and cordoned off by dry wall so there is a need to have the insulation against the roof. I don't have access to the attic so I'll need to cut a hole in the ceiling to see what is up there but I assume that is rock wool as well. There I assume I can do the standard type of insulating right above the ceiling. I'd hate to take down the rock wool since it doesn't seem to be degraded in any way, my preference is to add insulation over it. Can I just staple fiberglass over it or is spray foam my only real option due to the gravity situation? You can add more over it. What you add should not have a vapor barrier. In flat areas, you can just lay batts down over the old. how many inches though? If each inch is about 4 do I need to put about 8" over the 2" of wool I have now to get it up to code?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - dont block attic vents, and with a older home you likely need more ventilation too |
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