tearing down some walls. It does have insulation in it, but it is r-11. Should be r-13 ( outside walls) Should I reinsulate or will r-11 be fine. Never really used r-11 before.
chrisasst said:tearing down some walls. It does have insulation in it, but it is r-11. Should be r-13 ( outside walls) Should I reinsulate or will r-11 be fine. Never really used r-11 before.
joefrompa said:If the room has a history of being cold, tear out the old, make sure all exterior-to-interior holes/seams are sealed with caulk/foam. Then put in faced r-19.
If the exterior of the home is 15+ years old (i.e. mid 90s or older) and the room has a history of being cold, then also consider adding 1/2 to 1 inch foam sheathing on the studs before drywalling. Attach it via glue and slap it on the studs. Then drywall on top (with screws going into the studs). That'll be more expensive, but it'll really help the room become comfortable.
peakbagger said:and then installing 1/2" of taped Isoboard foil faced foam over the wall
peakbagger said:Obviously if you don't have reasonably efficient double pane windows its time to change them. If you insist on keeping old windows with sash weights, consider retrofitting them to eliminate the sash pockets.
peakbagger said:I bought them from here
http://cellularwindowshades.com/energy_saving_side_track.html.
Before I found these I bough some without the tracks from American Blind. They are okay, but the hardware is a bit lower quality.
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