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Albert
 
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Default Spray in foam insulation + minimum roof slope?

I've recently discovered the benefits of sprayed in foam, just in time
(I hope) to use it when we finish renovations in our home in rural
Maine. I'm having trouble with the roofing issue however and local
roofers here don't know the answer as few of them do metal roofs at
all (standing seam) and even fewer have experience with sprayed in
foam.

We have a very mildly sloped roof, (mono sloped roof facing east). We
had a metal roof put on 4 years ago and are very happy with it, snow
slides off despite the fact that there is very little slope (less than
1 inch rise for every 1 foot).

We also have marginal roof rafter size, they are 6 inch dimensional
rafters. We have a single wall in the middle of the house with about
14 feet of span on each side of the center load bearing wall. With the
marginal roof rafter size, it is imperative that snow slide off the
roof, if it was allowed to sit there and accumulate, it would surely
cause the roof to collapse, especially when back to back blizzards
occurr).

When we do the renovations in the Spring, we hope to leave the 6 inch
roof rafters and spray in 4 inches of foam. This should drastically
improve the heat loss, but I'm concerned that the improved insulation
will cause the snow to build up and stay on the roof instead of
sliding off as it does at present.

I can't find anyone who knows about this and I need to know whether we
can salvage the existing roof rafters or whether we need to redo them
with 10 inch rafters. Obviously, replacing the rafters will be
horribly expensive compared to salvaging the existing rafters.

Do we need to dump the existing rafters and install a roof with a
steeper pitch or is there a way to reuse the rafters that we have?

Thanks,

Art in Maine

mail to ky1k aatt pivot ddoott net




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m Ransley
 
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You want to spray the roof deck ? Normaly attics are vented to
outside temps to stop condensation. the attic floor is insulated. When
your roof leaks you will not know where it is and will rot. Insulate
the floor. If you are worried about supports just put more in screwing
to the original. Only insulate the roof deck if you will use it as a
heated living space.

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Albert
 
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I think you're talking about the crawl space, but am not positive.

Please understand, the ceiling in the front of the house (East side)
is 5 feet high, the ceiling in the backside is just over 7 feet high.

The rafters are laid from the front wall to the center load bearing
wall, then another set is laid from there to the backside of the
house.

The ceilings (inside) are not flat, there is no crawl space as you
would have with a peaked roof or with a trussed roof. The ceilings
(inside) follow the same slope as the roof does on the outside.

The 'roof deck' is above the second floor living space, we have our
bedrooms on the second floor which is how we can tolerate the low
ceiling height.

So, the only place to insulate is between the roof rafters and there
is no ventilation above the roof surface because there isn't anything
to ventilate::. There is no attic, there is no corner vent or vent at
the peak of the roof.

We cannot evaluate whether condensation has compromised the roof
rafters, but it is possible. Before we putt he metal roof on, the roof
used to leak. So, some of those cavities have been moist in the past.
Some of the ceiling was damaged, but it was patched, some drywall tape
changed and repainted.

We also think that interior grade particle board was used as the
covering for the roof rafters (instead of plywood or OSB). This is sub
standard and doesn't add structural strength to the house as plywood
would.

Perhaps the undersized roof rafters, the potential for moisture damage
and the particle board covering tip the scale in favor of a complete
replacement of the roof instead of trying to save or upgrade the
existing sub standard roof rafters?

Art
Art

On Mon, 8 Nov 2004 11:35:48 -0600, (m Ransley)
wrote:

You want to spray the roof deck ? Normaly attics are vented to
outside temps to stop condensation. the attic floor is insulated. When
your roof leaks you will not know where it is and will rot. Insulate
the floor. If you are worried about supports just put more in screwing
to the original. Only insulate the roof deck if you will use it as a
heated living space.




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Joseph Meehan
 
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Albert wrote:
I've recently discovered the benefits of sprayed in foam, just in time
(I hope) to use it when we finish renovations in our home in rural
Maine. I'm having trouble with the roofing issue however and local
roofers here don't know the answer as few of them do metal roofs at
all (standing seam) and even fewer have experience with sprayed in
foam.

We have a very mildly sloped roof, (mono sloped roof facing east). We
had a metal roof put on 4 years ago and are very happy with it, snow
slides off despite the fact that there is very little slope (less than
1 inch rise for every 1 foot).

We also have marginal roof rafter size, they are 6 inch dimensional
rafters. We have a single wall in the middle of the house with about
14 feet of span on each side of the center load bearing wall. With the
marginal roof rafter size, it is imperative that snow slide off the
roof, if it was allowed to sit there and accumulate, it would surely
cause the roof to collapse, especially when back to back blizzards
occurr).

When we do the renovations in the Spring, we hope to leave the 6 inch
roof rafters and spray in 4 inches of foam. This should drastically
improve the heat loss, but I'm concerned that the improved insulation
will cause the snow to build up and stay on the roof instead of
sliding off as it does at present.

I can't find anyone who knows about this and I need to know whether we
can salvage the existing roof rafters or whether we need to redo them
with 10 inch rafters. Obviously, replacing the rafters will be
horribly expensive compared to salvaging the existing rafters.

Do we need to dump the existing rafters and install a roof with a
steeper pitch or is there a way to reuse the rafters that we have?

Thanks,

Art in Maine

mail to ky1k aatt pivot ddoott net


I can't quite figure out what you are going to do, but it sounds like
you may be asking for trouble. Is there any kind of attic or area between
the living area and the roof deck? You really want that ventilated.

BTW snow that does not melt off the roof is good snow. It provides
additional insulation and it means there will not be Ice dams because the
snow is staying snow. The problems happen when the upper part of the roof
gets warm and the lower edge does not.

--
Joseph E. Meehan

26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math



  #5   Report Post  
m Ransley
 
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Default

With a new metal roof you will be good for a long , long,time, So the
roof is actualy your ceiling height, a heated area. how it it finished
now, drywall? And why do you think it is under supported. Yes than
foam would be good but 5.5 " foam is R 30.25? @ R. 5.5 per inch. Well
under minimum code for my area which is zone 5. Maybe an Architect
should be consulted for roof strength. Beams could be staggered to every
other joist to give more depth and get more insulation, but I see roof
hight is a concern . Also the silverfaced foamboard is R 7.2 per inch .
5.5 inches of that will gain you an Extra 5.5 R bringing you to the
minimum codes for most Zone 5 areas. But I believe in alot more. So you
will remove the drywall or ceiling to insulate? The snow will probably
slide but call the roof manufacturer they will know best



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PaPaPeng
 
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On Mon, 08 Nov 2004 11:17:59 -0500, Albert wrote:

I've recently discovered the benefits of sprayed in foam, just in time
(I hope) to use it when we finish renovations in our home in rural
Maine. I'm having trouble with the roofing issue however and local
roofers here don't know the answer as few of them do metal roofs at
all (standing seam) and even fewer have experience with sprayed in
foam.



Sprayed foam. Two caveats.

1. Since it is a chemical formulation it may outgas and cause
respiratory problems. The chemicals may also affect your health if
you have chemical sensitivities.

2. Foam effectively seals the structure it covers. Your studs, wood
sheathing, etc. cannot breath and therefore cannot stabilize its
moisture content with the ambient atmospheric conditions. New
lumberyard wood retains some dampness. If that moisture cannot be
vented because the sprayed foam seals it then wood rot occurs.
  #7   Report Post  
Albert
 
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On Mon, 8 Nov 2004 12:44:53 -0600, (m Ransley)
wrote:

With a new metal roof you will be good for a long , long,time, So the
roof is actualy your ceiling height, a heated area. how it it finished
now, drywall? And why do you think it is under supported. Yes than
foam would be good but 5.5 " foam is R 30.25? @ R. 5.5 per inch. Well
under minimum code for my area which is zone 5. Maybe an Architect
should be consulted for roof strength. Beams could be staggered to every
other joist to give more depth and get more insulation, but I see roof
hight is a concern . Also the silverfaced foamboard is R 7.2 per inch .
5.5 inches of that will gain you an Extra 5.5 R bringing you to the
minimum codes for most Zone 5 areas. But I believe in alot more. So you
will remove the drywall or ceiling to insulate? The snow will probably
slide but call the roof manufacturer they will know best


I'm not too worried about the ultimate R value, especially since I'm
not using fiberglass insulation for the renovation.

Yes, the area under the roof is living space. It's a full floor where
we have all our bedrooms. There is no attic, crawl space and the
indoor ceiling height is 5 feet on the low end of the house and 7 feet
at the high end. The slope on the ceiling is also the slope of the
roof and there is nothing to ventillate.

If we can salvage the existing roof support structure, then we will
remove the drywall from the ceiling and spray from the inside and
install new drywall. If we have to do a whole new roof from scratch,
then we will probably install a trussed roof with new covering and
insulate it from the top side (before putting plywood down).

Ceiling height is an issue. But, the kids room are on the low ceiling
height room, so they can live with low ceiling heights for quite a few
more years.

If we have to tear everything out, we will redo it properly and
everyone will have 8 foot ceilings.

Since our single slope roof is nearly flat, I think the snow load
slides off because the existing fiberglass insulation is so poor and
heat from underneath melts some snow which allows the snow to slide
off.

All this goes away IF we reinsulate with foam, and the snow will tend
to sit there because the heat loss will be much less. If we get 2 or 3
blizzards back to back (which happens sometimes), we could end up with
more snow than the roof could handle since we have 6 inch rafters and
a 14 foot span between the outside wall and the center load bearing
wall.

My original question was regarding the snow slide on a metal roof with
super insulation. If the snow will just sit there with a modest pitch,
then we are headed for trouble. If the snow will slide off anyway,
then we can save a big pile of money by just salvaging the existing 6
inch roof structure.

All comments appreciated.

Art



PS:

Just notice I forgot to answer your questions...

I believe the present roof is under-supported because it is 14 feet
between the load bearing walls and the rafters are only 6 inch (1 5/8
by 5.5). Despite the very modest pitch, snow slides off the metal roof
quickly after a storm.

The downstairs is nearly all open, and there is only one solid
interior wall to transfer the weight of the center of the roof down to
the basement floor. The distance from the center load bearing wall to
the outside wall is 14 feet and the roof rafters are 2 by 6's.

I'm worried that the snow won't slide off so quickly if we super
insulate as planned and that the snow load might cause the roof to
collapse.

-----------------

Also, right now, the upstairs is dry walled (walls and ceilings) but
not highly finished or polished. There would be little lost if we had
to redo the entire interior up there as it was never properly finished
anyway.


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Albert
 
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I can't quite figure out what you are going to do, but it sounds like
you may be asking for trouble. Is there any kind of attic or area between
the living area and the roof deck? You really want that ventilated.

BTW snow that does not melt off the roof is good snow. It provides
additional insulation and it means there will not be Ice dams because the
snow is staying snow. The problems happen when the upper part of the roof
gets warm and the lower edge does not.



Thanks Joseph,

Yes, I understand the ideal situation is for the snow to sit there for
as long as possible and that it's important for more than one reason.

NO-there is no attic and nothing to ventilate. Check the other replies
where I goave additional clarification and let me know if you need
further explanation.

Art


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Do we need to dump the existing rafters and install a roof with a
steeper pitch or is there a way to reuse the rafters that we have?


You should not be depending on the snow sliding off your roof
to keep it from collapsing, no matter how steep a pitch it has.
If your roof won't support the expected snow-load, then
re-enforce it. You can do this by doubling up the rafters,
or putting in a support beam (purlin) mid-span, or any number
of other ways, only one of which involves taking the roof
completely apart and re-building it from scratch.

--Goedjn

  #10   Report Post  
William Brown
 
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I'm no expert, but I read a lot before redoing our roof, which is
similar as out attic is finished, but we have, mostly, a greater slope.

One thing I read is that it is important to have unheated air circulate
below the roof, so snow will not melt, then refreeze, causing ice dams.
Thus, when planning to fill in the rafter cavities, you have to do
something to preserve an airway between the ridge vent and the soffit
vents. I read about something like a plastic or styrofoam product that
looked something like a near flattened gutter. You mount that to the
bottom of the decking, preserving an airway above the product, then fill
the balance of the rafter cavity with insulation.

However, with your abnormal slope, I think you would be wise to bring in
an expert to look at the situation and advise you on the best remedy.

Albert wrote:

I've recently discovered the benefits of sprayed in foam, just in time
(I hope) to use it when we finish renovations in our home in rural
Maine. I'm having trouble with the roofing issue however and local
roofers here don't know the answer as few of them do metal roofs at
all (standing seam) and even fewer have experience with sprayed in
foam.

We have a very mildly sloped roof, (mono sloped roof facing east). We
had a metal roof put on 4 years ago and are very happy with it, snow
slides off despite the fact that there is very little slope (less than
1 inch rise for every 1 foot).

We also have marginal roof rafter size, they are 6 inch dimensional
rafters. We have a single wall in the middle of the house with about
14 feet of span on each side of the center load bearing wall. With the
marginal roof rafter size, it is imperative that snow slide off the
roof, if it was allowed to sit there and accumulate, it would surely
cause the roof to collapse, especially when back to back blizzards
occurr).

When we do the renovations in the Spring, we hope to leave the 6 inch
roof rafters and spray in 4 inches of foam. This should drastically
improve the heat loss, but I'm concerned that the improved insulation
will cause the snow to build up and stay on the roof instead of
sliding off as it does at present.

I can't find anyone who knows about this and I need to know whether we
can salvage the existing roof rafters or whether we need to redo them
with 10 inch rafters. Obviously, replacing the rafters will be
horribly expensive compared to salvaging the existing rafters.

Do we need to dump the existing rafters and install a roof with a
steeper pitch or is there a way to reuse the rafters that we have?

Thanks,

Art in Maine

mail to ky1k aatt pivot ddoott net




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Albert
 
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OK, thanks.

The environmental effects, I've already researched. Both components of
the foam are non-toxic before they are combined. If combined in the
proper proportions, they give off heat, CO2 and the propellant gas.
After curing, the foam is very inert with only trace outgassing due to
temperature changes. After the initial cure, it's pretty safe, and can
even be installed indoors without ventilation. The MSDS sheets are
online for those who want to check themselves.

I hadn't thought of the wood issue! Yes, some wood is downright moist.
We get alot of lumber from saw mills around here and they do not have
kilns. The moisture content of the lumber can vary alot. I'll keep
this in mind before sealing up the structure. If we do construction in
the spring or summer, we can cover it from the outside to make house
weather tight and then apply the foam in the early fall after the
lumber has had a chance to dry out.

Thanks for pointing out the possible problem with moisture content of
the lumber.

Art



Sprayed foam. Two caveats.

1. Since it is a chemical formulation it may outgas and cause
respiratory problems. The chemicals may also affect your health if
you have chemical sensitivities.

2. Foam effectively seals the structure it covers. Your studs, wood
sheathing, etc. cannot breath and therefore cannot stabilize its
moisture content with the ambient atmospheric conditions. New
lumberyard wood retains some dampness. If that moisture cannot be
vented because the sprayed foam seals it then wood rot occurs.




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Joseph Meehan
 
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Albert wrote:
I can't quite figure out what you are going to do, but it sounds like
you may be asking for trouble. Is there any kind of attic or area
between
the living area and the roof deck? You really want that ventilated.

BTW snow that does not melt off the roof is good snow. It provides
additional insulation and it means there will not be Ice dams because the
snow is staying snow. The problems happen when the upper part of the
roof
gets warm and the lower edge does not.


I saw your other replies and I think you are headed in the right
direction. However I would seriously consider upgrading that roof
structure. It sounds like it is under-engineered and may well be a serious
problem in the future.

You will feel a lot better knowing you have a sold roof over your head.



Thanks Joseph,

Yes, I understand the ideal situation is for the snow to sit there for
as long as possible and that it's important for more than one reason.

NO-there is no attic and nothing to ventilate. Check the other replies
where I goave additional clarification and let me know if you need
further explanation.

Art


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--
Joseph E. Meehan

26 + 6 = 1 It's Irish Math



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Philip Lewis
 
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--text follows this line--
Note, I am not an engineer, insulation specialist, or anything...
I am in no way qualified to give any structural advice, and don't know
enough details from your situation to make an assesment if i were.
I'm a geek who has done some theatre work and lots of reading.
The following comments are just for consideration and possible picking
apart from those who might be qualified to make those judgements.

That said, I have a couple comments.

I believe the roof insulation technique you are suggesting (insulating
the entire cavity) is called a "hot roof". Google searches for that
term and insualtion, etc might give you some more information.
I've considered doing this in our attic, since we have no insulation
and the same sloped roofs and ceiling setup on our third floor
victorian, although, our peaks are trucated to ~7 feet, so we have a
flat ceiling where it's high enough. I couldn't find out if it was
appropriate for our climate, however. (Pittsburgh PA) I know it might
void the warrantee on some asphault roofing materials, but i don't
know how it would affect the metal roof. I think the way i'm going to
go is to put insulation baffels down first, then spray in foam.
The baffels will meet up in a plenum at the peak, and i'll deal with
the heat from there. (possibly with solar thermal collection

On to structural:
In theatre there is a type of platformed used called a stressed skin
platform. It's used to make a very strong but thin platform by
sandwiching two thin "skins" (plywood) over boards on their flats. (so
glue/screw the 3.5" sides of a 1x4 to the plywood). The resulting
platform is very thin, but has little deflection (sag) because the
deflection force is trying to compress wood on one side, and strech it
on another.

I believe there is a construction material made a similar way, using
two sheets of plywood, and a foam core. The curing of the foam adhears
the two sheets of plywood together and makes a fairly ridged board.

Perhaps removing the drywall from the ceiling, glue/screw-ing sheets
of plywood to the rafters, and filling the void with insulation will
cure several of your worries:
1: high insulation
2: new "stressed skin platform" roof has more strength than old roof.

If/when you get an engineer in to ask about this, perhaps you can give
him/her that option to consider. It might make them look at solutions
they didn't consider.

While we're on the subject... anyone use the DIY foam insulation
product from fomofoam.com. What kind of results did you get?
Any other DIY foam kits for sale?

--
be safe.
flip
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Remove origin of the word spam from address to reply (leave "+")

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m Ransley
 
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R value is what makes insulation work, not the sales pitch someone gave
you about houses heat 2-400 percent less with foam as you wronly state.
I foamed the exterior of my house with R 14.4 foam and R 100 in attic my
bills went down 25%. If you were correct I would be paying 400 % less.
And nobody knows if Icynene will deteriorate like UFFI. Still R 7.2
foamboard is your best bet. So is following code minimums..

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