I am building my own home now. I am trying to built an engery efficient home. I plan on going with a "hot attic" as it is called. This is where you use spray foam on the attic side of you roof sheathing instead of the attic floor. I will have my air handling unit and duct work in the attic. Down side: it has been proven that a hot attic adds about 10 degrees to your shingles. This will take 2 to 3 years away from the life of your shingles. Positive side: This will make your attic part of the envelope. This will put you air handling unit and duct work in the envelope. Duct work leaks, it just does. Now it leaks into the envelope. This has proven to increase the performance of this part of the HVCA system 25% to 30% because it is no longer in a hot environment. Attic access stairs and recess lighting are hard to insulate. They are a weak link in insulating you attic floor. Now that is not a problem. I will add storage space to my home that is conditioned and better for the items I store in the attic. There are 2 kinds of spray foams. Icynene and Urethane. Icynene is softer so it moves with the stucture (wood swelling and shrinking) and contains no VOC's. It can be damaged easier because it is soft. Urethane harderns adding strength to structures it is applies to. Has a higher R value, does have VOC's and is not damaged as easy. Both have to have a fire retarder added (ie drywall or the same paper that is used on batt insulation). The same paper that is used on batt insulation call be obtained from the insulator and 9 cents a sqare foot. You do not have a drywall a "limited access space" (ie attic and crawl space) in my area. Neither of these insulations absorb moisture, permit convection, sag or settle, contain formaldehyde, require a drying time or supply food for termites. NOW, since you have just sealed your attic up tight. Your house no longer breathes as well. Warm moist air rises. It usually, easily goes right out of the vents in your attic. So does your conditioned air. Anyways, this warm moist air will be traps in your attic. Not good. Now you must have a return duct put in your attic or another way to get the moist air out of yor air and supply it with conditioned air. This can be done by your HVAC guy. Since I am building a very tight home, I plan on installing an ERV. This introduces fresh are into the HVAC system. The air is conditioned and circulated throughout the home via your supply ducts. Then some air is taken from the home and exspelled via the returns. Sorry to get in the HVAC system but I have yet to figure out why insulation and HVAC systems are not treated as ONE SYSTEM. Anyways, "build it tight and ventilate it right." Do it right or you will end up with moisture problems that will do more harm than good. |