Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
![]() |
These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
Posted By: bhommelsThe heritage house pages come across as very orthodox to me. It is all anecdotal without any numbers on U values, heat loss figures, or even wall thickness to back up their arguments, which I find very unconvincing.
Perhaps their aggressive, conservative attitude is necessary when dealing with people (outside this forum) wanting to "improve" historic properties?
Anyway. The core of their argument is well known around here: IWI should not be overdone so that there still is some deliberate heat loss through the solid walls to keep them dry, and warm enough to avoid interstitial condensation and freezing of saturated masonry. There are calculators for this, and although there are better ones you could try to have a go here:
https://www.ubakus.com/en/r-value-calculator/
Posted By: kristevaI've been making plans to insulate some of my internal walls with Steico wood fibre boards, probably no more than 40 - 60mm so I'd be interested in what people think.
Posted By: kristevaI've been making plans to insulate some of my internal walls with Steico wood fibre boards
Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryPosted By: kristevaI've been making plans to insulate some of my internal walls with Steico wood fibre boards, probably no more than 40 - 60mm so I'd be interested in what people think.
As you will probably have read here - EWI is better than IWI for several reasons, however why are you planning to insulate some of your internal walls ??
Posted By: bxmanI have only so far read the first page
And I think the writer fail to proof read with care ;
It follows that if you insulate the external walls of your house, you are stopping heat from getting to the outer walls. This means that the thermal mass of the entire outside envelope of the house is lost - the walls cool down in winter and stay cold. So the only barrier between you and the outside world is effectively the insulated stud wall that you put inside the wall. So - you are ending up, not with a thick, warm wall, but with a very thin wall - mostly freezing cold, with a veneer of insulation which is your only protection from the elements. Why bother insulating - just use the nice thick wall and keep it dry!
I think he intended to say
It follows that if you insulate the internal walls of your house ........................
In this case I agree with every word.
Having EWI fitted 5 years ago it was the best investment I have ever made ,
Posted By: djhPosted By: kristevaI've been making plans to insulate some of my internal walls with Steico wood fibre boards
You mean the insides of your external walls, I hope? There's no point in (thermally) insulating internal walls.
My opinion, which I think is fairly mainstream around here, is that EWI is better than IWI where it is possible. It keeps the thermal mass available to the interior, keeps the structure dry, and is often easier to detail.
Water vapour and (interstitial) condensation is the chief bugbear of IWI, followed by the risks of damage to newly cold structure (e.g. spalling of brick or stonework) plus the complexity of detailing around junctions. But sometimes it's the only choice.
Posted By: bxmanI have only so far read the first page
And I think the writer fail to proof read with care ;
It follows that if you insulate the external walls of your house, you are stopping heat from getting to the outer walls. This means that the thermal mass of the entire outside envelope of the house is lost - the walls cool down in winter and stay cold. So the only barrier between you and the outside world is effectively the insulated stud wall that you put inside the wall. So - you are ending up, not with a thick, warm wall, but with a very thin wall - mostly freezing cold, with a veneer of insulation which is your only protection from the elements. Why bother insulating - just use the nice thick wall and keep it dry!
I think he intended to say
It follows that if you insulate the internal walls of your house ........................
In this case I agree with every word.
Having EWI fitted 5 years ago it was the best investment I have ever made ,
Posted By: lineweightThat just doesn't make any sense... "the only barrier between you and the outside world is effectively the insulated stud wall you put inside the wall"Maybe they think the no-longer-heated wall will become wet and therefore not be such a good insulator. Dunno, it sort of makes some sense but it'd be difficult to say how much difference it'd make.
Do they think the thick stone wall outside of it disappears, or stops doing anything?
Posted By: Ed DaviesPosted By: lineweightThat just doesn't make any sense... "the only barrier between you and the outside world is effectively the insulated stud wall you put inside the wall"Maybe they think the no-longer-heated wall will become wet and therefore not be such a good insulator. Dunno, it sort of makes some sense but it'd be difficult to say how much difference it'd make.
Do they think the thick stone wall outside of it disappears, or stops doing anything?
Posted By: WillInAberdeenI heard that argument while living in a farmhouse with a barn attached. The walls of the house and the barn were built identically, except that the barn had never been heated in the 150+ years it had been standing there. I was therefore confident in IWIing the house, which caused no problems for the subsequent decade I stayed there.
Posted By: jfbI went with 60mm woodfibre steico, 20mm on reveals - works very well.
I think the anti IWI argument from such sources is a load of sh...e!
Clearly EWI is better and there is a danger of overdoing IWI leading to condensation risk.
How flat are the walls? Brick/stone? Original Lime render in place?
Having to add a flattening layer of render (also the airtight layer) adds to the effort but was needed for my stone walls.
Posted By: Ed DaviesPosted By: lineweightThat just doesn't make any sense... "the only barrier between you and the outside world is effectively the insulated stud wall you put inside the wall"Maybe they think the no-longer-heated wall will become wet and therefore not be such a good insulator. Dunno, it sort of makes some sense but it'd be difficult to say how much difference it'd make.
Do they think the thick stone wall outside of it disappears, or stops doing anything?
Posted By: WillInAberdeenI heard that argument while living in a farmhouse with a barn attached. The walls of the house and the barn were built identically, except that the barn had never been heated in the 150+ years it had been standing there. I was therefore confident in IWIing the house, which caused no problems for the subsequent decade I stayed there.
A lot of scare stories about IWI started by misreading the influential 'Breaking the mould' series of articles, which were thoughtfully written about a specific set of walls in Dublin, but their conclusions have been misapplied to many other places. Well worth a read. The author was upfront that the WuFi predictions didn't seem to match real world observations, and had some thoughts about why not.
There are advantages and disadvantages to both IWI and EWI and the trick is to apply the right one to the right wall, but not be scared off and leave it poorly insulated!
Edit: re the question of the original post, 9" of brick is no longer enough insulation, as you can tell by touching it. 60mm of woodfibre would double its resistance but still not meet the legal minimum for upgrades in many countries. You only want to do this messy job once so I would want thicker insulation than that, or a higher performance type.
Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryPosted By: WillInAberdeenI heard that argument while living in a farmhouse with a barn attached. The walls of the house and the barn were built identically, except that the barn had never been heated in the 150+ years it had been standing there. I was therefore confident in IWIing the house, which caused no problems for the subsequent decade I stayed there.
I have seen a brick built barn with badly spalled brickwork on the lower courses - presumably due to frost damage to damp bricks, I also own a (now converted) stone / rubble built barn a couple of hundred years old that has no problems. I guess it depends upon the construction materials used as to the susceptibility of the problem.
Posted By: WillInAberdeenI heard that argument while living in a farmhouse with a barn attached. The walls of the house and the barn were built identically, except that the barn had never been heated in the 150+ years it had been standing there. I was therefore confident in IWIing the house, which caused no problems for the subsequent decade I stayed there.
A lot of scare stories about IWI started by misreading the influential 'Breaking the mould' series of articles, which were thoughtfully written about a specific set of walls in Dublin, but their conclusions have been misapplied to many other places. Well worth a read. The author was upfront that the WuFi predictions didn't seem to match real world observations, and had some thoughts about why not.
There are advantages and disadvantages to both IWI and EWI and the trick is to apply the right one to the right wall, but not be scared off and leave it poorly insulated!
Edit: re the question of the original post, 9" of brick is no longer enough insulation, as you can tell by touching it. 60mm of woodfibre would double its resistance but still not meet the legal minimum for upgrades in many countries. You only want to do this messy job once so I would want thicker insulation than that, or a higher performance type.
Posted By: kristevaI think what the article is saying is that with dry walls and keeping the house at a constant temperature with the fireplaces going the walls/bricks gradually heat up and provide a barrier to the outside weather.
Posted By: kristevaMy walls are a bit of a mix tbh.
So I'll need to apply a flattening render as you say before fixing the boards.
Did you do the work yourself?
Posted By: kristevaI think the idea is that you loose the insulation effect of the porous red brick in favour of the wood board so you're just replacing one with the other rather than getting benefit from both. So he's asking the question, what's the point.
Posted By: kristevaYes, solid brick walls are often cold to the touch in winter.
Posted By: kristevaI'm not totally convinced that not heating a wall can cause damp.
Posted By: Peter_in_HungaryI did a quick calculation using ubskus with the 60mm wood fibre as IWI and then as EWI. Both had the same U value (0.498) but with IWI condensation was shown on the inner surface of the brick but with EWI no condensation risk was shown. There was no VCL in either calculation. 9" brick with internal plaster gave a U of 1.726 so your 60mm of wood fibre will make a big difference, so if you IWI make sure you have a good VCL inboard of the woodfibre board.
Posted By: Mike1AFAIK, ubskus if fine for u-Value calculations, but for moisture only does Glaser calculations
1 to 27 of 27