FarmerPete
Well-known member
So, I'm starting to do some demo to redo my garage. I punched a hole in the shared wall between the garage and the house to see what was behind the walls. The house was built in the mid 60's. The wall was drywalled, and behind that, there is some kind of fiberboard with a black fabricish stuff built into it. I'm really not sure what it is, or why it's there. There was insulation in the 2x4 wall cavity, so I'm not sure yet if I'm going to take down the entire wall yet.
Here are my questions.
1. Anyone know what this fiberboard is, and more importantly what function it performs?
2. Who thinks I should take the wall down? Is it worth it to redo the insulation? My main workbench wall is going to be a different wall, so I don't need to run any electric in this wall (except I'm planning on putting a subpanel near where I made my exploratory cut)
3. If I take down everything, get down to studs, and remove the insulation, what should I put back up to properly insulate, vapor barrier, and fire seperate my garage and house? I'm planning on using OSB for the other walls. I figured Thermafiber mineral wool insulation, and then get some fire rated OSB (OUCH, this stuff is expensive). Not sure if I'd need to put up some plastic as a vapor barrier.
Thoughts?
Here are my questions.
1. Anyone know what this fiberboard is, and more importantly what function it performs?
2. Who thinks I should take the wall down? Is it worth it to redo the insulation? My main workbench wall is going to be a different wall, so I don't need to run any electric in this wall (except I'm planning on putting a subpanel near where I made my exploratory cut)
3. If I take down everything, get down to studs, and remove the insulation, what should I put back up to properly insulate, vapor barrier, and fire seperate my garage and house? I'm planning on using OSB for the other walls. I figured Thermafiber mineral wool insulation, and then get some fire rated OSB (OUCH, this stuff is expensive). Not sure if I'd need to put up some plastic as a vapor barrier.
Thoughts?
