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. |
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Posted By: owlmanA couple of possibilities, building silicone or Butyl tape, (it's available in 2" wide rolls).
Posted By: ............I have some 2" butyl tape but I'd need an awful lot of it! The whole area has to be airtight, not just some strips. So for the living room window alone that's about 250 mm x 3000 mm. I believe silicone is viewed as unreliable over time.
Posted By: owlmanThis is the sort of stuff I had in mind,
50mm x 1mm x 50M
Are you saying the whole 250mm width has to be covered? Couldn't you put say three strips of tape, perhaps with a bead of building silicone between.
What material are the window boards?
Posted By: djhErr, you were involved in the thread about the leakiness of OSB weren't you? Ah yes:http://www.greenbuildingforum.co.uk/newforum/comments.php?DiscussionID=9361" >http://www.greenbuildingforum.co.uk/newforum/comments.php?DiscussionID=9361Yes, and the point of that is that some of us incl Viking House have found OSB reliably airtight, despite what others say - and the manufs are taking the matter thoroughly in hand. The prize - no more tapes and membranes - is v valuable.
Posted By: fostertomYes, and the point of that is that some of us incl Viking House have found OSB reliably airtight, despite what others say - and the manufs are taking the matter thoroughly in hand. The prize - no more tapes and membranes - is v valuable.
If in doubt, why not paint on some sealer?
Posted By: owlmanIf you have sufficient depth for the window boards why not put in a "utility ground" window board of plain MDF sealed, glued, screwed, taped; whatever. That would be the airtight seal. Then you could simply bond another decorative, veneered MDF or solid wood on top of it with a downstand lip to cover the ground beneath, and with no visible fixings.
Posted By: djhMDF isn't suitable because that definitely is not airtightAh so - I never needed to ask that so far.
Posted By: djhwhich brands of OSB are airtight and especially no manufacturers' certsAs yet, no brands are definitely certified airtight - even varies from batch to batch, or at least they can't be sure. But fact remains that Viking House reports consistently gd results, and he builds a lot.
Posted By: fostertomBut fact remains that Viking House reports consistently gd results
Posted By: djh...... The idea of an airtight board rather than an airtight membrane is an interesting one though. MDF isn't suitable because that definitely is not airtight. But I'll measure how much room we do have and see whether I can find a thin airtight board.
What about phenolic resin coated ply? It's expensive but one or two 8 x 4s may suffice for all your windows.
Posted By: owlmanWhat about phenolic resin coated ply? It's expensive but one or two 8 x 4s may suffice for all your windows
Posted By: TriassicIf MDF is not airtight how about using a plastic window board or Formica?
Posted By: TriassicOr Kronospan OSB Airstop board.
Posted By: djhI feel sure there must be some coating that wil do the job.I've often wondered if a coating would work. It could easily be sprayed on at the construction stage.
Posted By: TriassicIf MDF is not airtight how about using a plastic window board or Formica?
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