DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   UK diy (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/)
-   -   Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes (https://www.diybanter.com/uk-diy/294557-foam-2-pound-blue-foam-holmes-homes.html)

george [dicegeorge] December 22nd 09 11:21 PM

Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes
 
Watching Holmes on Homes tuesday evening on a Shed channel
he was fixing some freezing plumbing which had been half insulated
with what he called 'half pound foam'
(which I guess is the expanding foam we get here in cans).
He said in cold weather it shrinks and creates gap through which cold
air can flow.
He coated it with a blue foam, which he called 'Two pound foam'.
What is this stuff?

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php?...Expanding_Foam
does not help.

[g]

Colin Wilson December 22nd 09 11:58 PM

Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes
 
He coated it with a blue foam, which he called 'Two pound foam'.
What is this stuff?


Instinctively, i'd say it was foam of a different (higher) density

[email protected] December 23rd 09 12:13 AM

Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes
 
On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 23:21:31 +0000, "george [dicegeorge]"
wrote:

Watching Holmes on Homes tuesday evening on a Shed channel
he was fixing some freezing plumbing which had been half insulated
with what he called 'half pound foam'
(which I guess is the expanding foam we get here in cans).
He said in cold weather it shrinks and creates gap through which cold
air can flow.
He coated it with a blue foam, which he called 'Two pound foam'.
What is this stuff?

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php?...Expanding_Foam
does not help.

[g]



The two most commonly used spray foam products are low-density,
open-cell SPF (nominally referred to as “1/2 pound”) and
medium-density, closed-cell foam (“2 pound”). Foametix offers both
types of SPF, dubbed Blue Max 050 Open-cell and Blue Max 200
Closed-cell.





Dave Liquorice[_2_] December 23rd 09 12:20 AM

Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes
 
On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 23:21:31 +0000, george [dicegeorge] wrote:

He coated it with a blue foam, which he called 'Two pound foam'.
What is this stuff?

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php?...Expanding_Foam
does not help.


Google does if you look...

--
Cheers
Dave.




js.b1 December 23rd 09 01:14 AM

Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes
 
Open cell foam will absorb moisture from the air whenever the pipe is
at the dew point, which will then freeze should the opportunity arise.
Closed cell foam by its nature will not.

Armaflex is a preformed pipe insulation which is closed-cell.

george [dicegeorge] December 23rd 09 10:43 AM

Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes
 
Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 23:21:31 +0000, george [dicegeorge] wrote:

He coated it with a blue foam, which he called 'Two pound foam'.
What is this stuff?

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php?...Expanding_Foam
does not help.


Google does if you look...

i've googled:
oh dear,
2 days ago i filled the gaps at the top of an exterior wall with foam,
was going to cap it with a thin layer of concrete,
(before the slates go back on).

But the foam may move with heat variations,
the concrete may crack,
and water seep in,
so i guess that to do a long-lasting job
when the snow's gone i'll have to clear it all out
and use concrete to infill.
[g]

Stuart Noble December 23rd 09 11:19 AM

Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes
 
george [dicegeorge] wrote:
Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 23:21:31 +0000, george [dicegeorge] wrote:

He coated it with a blue foam, which he called 'Two pound foam'.
What is this stuff?

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php?...Expanding_Foam
does not help.


Google does if you look...

i've googled:
oh dear,
2 days ago i filled the gaps at the top of an exterior wall with foam,
was going to cap it with a thin layer of concrete,
(before the slates go back on).

But the foam may move with heat variations,
the concrete may crack,
and water seep in,
so i guess that to do a long-lasting job
when the snow's gone i'll have to clear it all out
and use concrete to infill.
[g]


Hardly a critical location. Even on my gable end wall, which faces SW
and has a minimal slate overhang, I only used mortar. Stick some pva in
the mix if you're woried.

Andy Dingley December 23rd 09 11:26 AM

Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes
 
On 23 Dec, 01:14, "js.b1" wrote:

Armaflex is a preformed pipe insulation which is closed-cell.


Armaflex is also neoprene, so that the cells flex if they do happen to
be wet and frozen. Stiffer foams (PU, PIR) will tend to crumble
gradually over the years.

One of my favourite things in the workshop ever is a roll of "Armaflex
gaffer tape", 3mm sticky-backed neoprene. It makes non-slip pads under
furniture, anti-vibration handle wrappings on power tools, draught
excluders on windows, the works.

george [dicegeorge] December 23rd 09 11:42 AM

Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes
 
Stuart Noble wrote:
george [dicegeorge] wrote:
Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 23:21:31 +0000, george [dicegeorge] wrote:

He coated it with a blue foam, which he called 'Two pound foam'.
What is this stuff?

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php?...Expanding_Foam
does not help.

Google does if you look...

i've googled:
oh dear,
2 days ago i filled the gaps at the top of an exterior wall with foam,
was going to cap it with a thin layer of concrete,
(before the slates go back on).

But the foam may move with heat variations,
the concrete may crack,
and water seep in,
so i guess that to do a long-lasting job
when the snow's gone i'll have to clear it all out
and use concrete to infill.
[g]


Hardly a critical location. Even on my gable end wall, which faces SW
and has a minimal slate overhang, I only used mortar. Stick some pva in
the mix if you're woried.

there were huge gaps in the top of the wall (north facing)
filled with straw from decades of birds.
It will take perhaps 20 buckets of cocrete lugged up the ladder,
and a few hour removing the foam,
but i think i'd better do it
as the foam wouldnt last many decades.

[g]


Usenet Nutter December 23rd 09 11:55 AM

Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes
 
On Wed, 23 Dec 2009 00:20:17 +0000 (GMT), "Dave Liquorice"
wrote:

On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 23:21:31 +0000, george [dicegeorge] wrote:

He coated it with a blue foam, which he called 'Two pound foam'.
What is this stuff?

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php?...Expanding_Foam
does not help.


Google does if you look...


I've seen Holmes on Homes mentioned a few times and kept wondering WTF
does Eamonn know about houses ...but now I know
This might be of interest
http://www.envirofoaminsulation.com/versus.html

george [dicegeorge] December 28th 09 06:26 PM

Foam - 2 pound blue foam on Holmes on Homes
 
today i started ripping the interior foam from the top of the wall
where I put it last week,
and i've ordered this:

http://www.expandingfoamkits.co.uk/p...mplete-Kit.htm
Smallest of the Touch 'N Foam Kits -
(15ft2 or 1m2 at 1 inch or 25mm)

which I hope is the correct kind of exterior closed cell foam
for using where water might dribble in.


george [dicegeorge] wrote:
Stuart Noble wrote:
george [dicegeorge] wrote:
Dave Liquorice wrote:
On Tue, 22 Dec 2009 23:21:31 +0000, george [dicegeorge] wrote:

He coated it with a blue foam, which he called 'Two pound foam'.
What is this stuff?

http://wiki.diyfaq.org.uk/index.php?...Expanding_Foam
does not help.

Google does if you look...

i've googled:
oh dear,
2 days ago i filled the gaps at the top of an exterior wall with foam,
was going to cap it with a thin layer of concrete,
(before the slates go back on).

But the foam may move with heat variations,
the concrete may crack,
and water seep in,
so i guess that to do a long-lasting job
when the snow's gone i'll have to clear it all out
and use concrete to infill.
[g]


Hardly a critical location. Even on my gable end wall, which faces SW
and has a minimal slate overhang, I only used mortar. Stick some pva
in the mix if you're woried.

there were huge gaps in the top of the wall (north facing)
filled with straw from decades of birds.
It will take perhaps 20 buckets of cocrete lugged up the ladder,
and a few hour removing the foam,
but i think i'd better do it
as the foam wouldnt last many decades.

[g]



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:31 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter