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mark September 25th 04 03:09 AM

vapor barrier in basement
 
I'm putting up some walls and a subfloor in our basement. I've read in some
places to put a vapor barrier right against the bare concrete walls, then
stud it, then insulate and put up another barrier. Some other books say to
omit the one against the concrete. I'm thinking I just paint it with a good
basement paint. There's no water coming in, just an overall dampness. I
assume the same goes for the floor? Just paint it, or plastic then stud and
insulate, then plywood over that?



James Owens September 25th 04 05:18 AM


"mark" ) writes:
I'm putting up some walls and a subfloor in our basement. I've read in some
places to put a vapor barrier right against the bare concrete walls, then
stud it, then insulate and put up another barrier. Some other books say to
omit the one against the concrete. I'm thinking I just paint it with a good
basement paint. There's no water coming in, just an overall dampness. I
assume the same goes for the floor? Just paint it, or plastic then stud and
insulate, then plywood over that?





One advantage to having a barrier on both sides of the studs is that you
can wrap around the top and bottom plates and tape the whole thing up,
making it more airtight. Also using an external barrier may offer longer
protection against dampness; it's important to keep your insulation dry.

I used a black waterproof "scutan paper" that was pretty easy to work
with. If you paint, I think you're supposed to grind the stuff into the
concrete with a wire brush.

--
"For it is only of the new one grows tired. Of the old one never tires."
-- Kierkegaard, _Repetition_

James Owens, Ottawa, Canada

James Owens September 25th 04 05:22 AM



"mark" ) writes:

assume the same goes for the floor? Just paint it, or plastic then stud and
insulate, then plywood over that?


The advantages of insulating the subfloor are supposed to be minimal. Most
of the cold comes in from above-ground walls.

--
"For it is only of the new one grows tired. Of the old one never tires."
-- Kierkegaard, _Repetition_

James Owens, Ottawa, Canada

Dave September 25th 04 07:21 AM

Ask your building inspector. Those guys are quite particular that the
deed is done according to current code. A few years ago my building
inspector didn't like the fact that I had vapor barrier on both sides of the
wall above grade, and I had to cut the outer layer to allow it to 'breathe'
above grade. Below grade he said it was ok.

Dave

"mark" wrote in message
...
I'm putting up some walls and a subfloor in our basement. I've read in
some
places to put a vapor barrier right against the bare concrete walls, then
stud it, then insulate and put up another barrier. Some other books say to
omit the one against the concrete. I'm thinking I just paint it with a
good
basement paint. There's no water coming in, just an overall dampness. I
assume the same goes for the floor? Just paint it, or plastic then stud
and
insulate, then plywood over that?





Oscar_Lives September 25th 04 06:34 PM


"James Owens" wrote in message
...

The advantages of insulating the subfloor are supposed to be minimal.
Most
of the cold comes in from above-ground walls.



Don't you mean "LOSS OF HEAT"?





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