Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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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: Herodotus…glass wool insulation is a lot less effective in some applicationsYes, the thermal resistance of insulation can depend on the orientation due to lengths of convection paths. E.g, the R-value of mineral wool laid on top of a ceiling might well be different from the same material stuffed into a vertical cavity even if the top surface of that in the loft is sealed in some way.
Posted By: davidfreeboroughIn both cases, a render applied directly to the insulation is likely to perform better than a rain screen with an ventilated gap between it & the EWI.Doesn't that depend on the insulant and the method of installation David?
Posted By: gravelldDoesn't that depend on the insulant and the method of installation David?Yes, agreed. I was thinking of a semi-rigid mineral wool or rigid polystyrene EWI directly applied to a masonry substrate. If there's a sarking/sheathing board and a breather membrane outside the insulation then a ventilated rainscreen is unlikely to degrade the performance.
Imagine a Larssen truss boxed out, filled with insulant (cellulose, EPS bead, whatever). Surely the boxing stops the wind washing.
Posted By: Ed DaviesThat Canadian experiment is interesting but without knowing how the houses were used it's impossible to say if that 50% energy difference was significant. E.g., maybe they should get the occupants to swap houses for the following year and see if the difference stays the same.The other major thing that went unmentioned was the relative airtightness of the two houses. This is not related to the insulation and could easily result in a 50% energy consumption difference.
Posted By: davidfreeboroughThe other major thing that went unmentioned was the relative airtightness of the two houses. This is not related to the insulation and could easily result in a 50% energy consumption difference.Yes. Could also have been related to the insulation in that the EPS could have been providing the airtightness.
Posted By: Ed DaviesAny suggestions as to how you'd actually do that?
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