Thanks, this is a rebuild The original burnt down 15 months ago. Im too paranoid of fire now to even consider it. I didn’t think of flammability. I’ll be going with fiberglass.Two points to consider with open cell:
1) It does not offer any vapor barrier resistance, so if you don't have house wrap over your OSB that could be a concern.
2) It is fairly flammable, so you will need and inside wall and ceiling cover (drywall, metal, etc.)
Otherwise, yes it can be very effective product to use.
Testing at Oak Ridge National Lab showed cellulose was even better.Rock wool is even better than fiberglass when to comes to flammability.
Lab tests are different than real life.Testing at Oak Ridge National Lab showed cellulose was even better.
Yeah. In real life batt's reform much worse than their rating.Lab tests are different than real life.
Agreed. It looks like a conventional ceiling with vented soffits and ridge. That is a perfect candidate for blown insulation (cellulose or fiberglass).I could see foam in the walls, but you have a conventional ceiling.
Foam will be a waste of money over the proper depth of blow in cellulose there.
Rockwool and wet blown cellulose will be superior in the walls compared to foam in fire resistance
and cellulose smolders causing wood framing to burn.Yeah. In real life batt's reform much worse than their rating.
Fire causes framing to burn. Cellulose does not spontaneously combust. Rockwool or fiberglass is not the cause of fires either. Foam can spontaneously combust during installation if applied too thick too fast.and cellulose smolders causing wood framing to burn.
Pretty good handling moisture too and rodents do not like it either.Rock wool is even better than fiberglass when to comes to flammability.
