I've been busy researching how best to put togther the timber framed walls on a new build workshop and one things still puzzles me.
The layers I have in mind are, from the inside:
1) internal cladding
2) vapour barrier
3) insulation
4) breatheable membrane
5) air gap (air flow runs vertically)
6) external cladding
The air gap in combination with my prefered vertical cladding complicates the contruction a bit but I've worked out a method which I'm happy with.
Looking through the builds here though it appears that no-one bothers with the air gap. Is the view then that it is unecessary overkill in a workshop? I think the theory behind it is to stop any water vapour which gets past the vapour barrier becoming trapped in the insulation and condensing out where it's least wanted.
The layers I have in mind are, from the inside:
1) internal cladding
2) vapour barrier
3) insulation
4) breatheable membrane
5) air gap (air flow runs vertically)
6) external cladding
The air gap in combination with my prefered vertical cladding complicates the contruction a bit but I've worked out a method which I'm happy with.
Looking through the builds here though it appears that no-one bothers with the air gap. Is the view then that it is unecessary overkill in a workshop? I think the theory behind it is to stop any water vapour which gets past the vapour barrier becoming trapped in the insulation and condensing out where it's least wanted.