Just finished my second read of this, it turned out fantastic. What is the cladding colour like now?
I'm also curious what you did with the corners of the EPDM where it folds over the edge?
First ceiling insulation going up. Doing full boards by myself is not going to work! I fought it and won this evening, with the help of an impromptu ice hockey stick prop, but not again!
View attachment 145747
View attachment 145748
Fitz.
Funny how these buildings end up looking so much smaller inside when you fill them with tools. I had a similar experience with a full sheet of plasterboard on a ceiling a couple of years ago, proper Laurel and Hardy moment as the prop slipped slipped before I could get a screw in and it broke into 4 pieces over my head. Good deal on the insulation, well done.
Yes it could. I’d pretty much squared myself away that the risk was small as I only occupy the space for about 10hours each week and work at 13-15degC.Um - a bit puzzled about the moisture management here. I see boards (permeable), no vapour barrier, rockwool (permeable), then osb (hardly permeable at all). So if you heat the space, won't moisture condense on the inside face of the osb?
Yes, as you describe your usage, the risk is small. But usages can change ...
To do a 'proper' job the barrier would have to be contiguous, with lapped and taped joins - a complete wrap covering walls, floor, ceiling, anywhere there was insulation.
I think the rule for insulation 'sandwich' construction is that the outside cladding must be more breathable than the inside cladding.
Here? Only in bathrooms if the builder isn't cheap.Are you using moisture resistant plasterboard?
Or Wales or Scotland, for that matter ... ;-)near Vancouver where it is just as wet as England
One of the best things ever bought were telescopic props for doing this. Don't need to use them often now but an absolute godsend when refurbing the house and replacing all the knackered old lath and plaster ceilings with boards.Funny how these buildings end up looking so much smaller inside when you fill them with tools. I had a similar experience with a full sheet of plasterboard on a ceiling a couple of years ago, proper Laurel and Hardy moment as the prop slipped slipped before I could get a screw in and it broke into 4 pieces over my head. Good deal on the insulation, well done.
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