House is being re-sided. Original siding was asbestos shingles nailed into furring strips that were attached to sheetrock that was on stud.
No actual air barrier except the sheetrock, and it had TONS of holes in it throughout the entire house.
Now I'm re-siding with 3/8" foam put over the sheetrock and tyvek on top of that, taped and caulked seams and such.
I'm wondering if the house is gonna be much more resistant to feeding air into the stove now, and wonder if I'll have to re-learn the sensitivity of the stove.
I'm VERY excited to have this done as I'm eliminating some huge leaks + adding about ~1.5-2.0 r-value to the entire exterior siding of the house + making it alot tighter overall. Really hoping to see some significant gains in heat retention come winter. I'm actually gonna let my wife keep the thermostat at ~63-65 and use the stove to hold the house there or raise it up a few degrees higher, so it better hold the heat in now!
(last year was 55 degrees at night and no higher than 60 during most days, 63 if the stove was off altogether - used 150 gallons total oil).
Joe
No actual air barrier except the sheetrock, and it had TONS of holes in it throughout the entire house.
Now I'm re-siding with 3/8" foam put over the sheetrock and tyvek on top of that, taped and caulked seams and such.
I'm wondering if the house is gonna be much more resistant to feeding air into the stove now, and wonder if I'll have to re-learn the sensitivity of the stove.
I'm VERY excited to have this done as I'm eliminating some huge leaks + adding about ~1.5-2.0 r-value to the entire exterior siding of the house + making it alot tighter overall. Really hoping to see some significant gains in heat retention come winter. I'm actually gonna let my wife keep the thermostat at ~63-65 and use the stove to hold the house there or raise it up a few degrees higher, so it better hold the heat in now!

(last year was 55 degrees at night and no higher than 60 during most days, 63 if the stove was off altogether - used 150 gallons total oil).
Joe