Not specifically garage related, but certainly applies to garages as well. Executive summary is, do any of you have experience with the spray foam insulation on the underside of the roof deck?
I've got an older house that I'm fixer-upper-ing. That includes some restructuring and rewiring in the near future, which involves swimming through about 20" of blown fiberglass insulation looking for wires and so on. And oh what fun when we have to drop some of the ceiling. Also, here in Phoenix, summer attic temperatures can get totally ridiculous. And even though I've wrapped/sealed my split AC attic units and ducts, it blows HOT air for over a minute when it kicks on. So my plan is to have the underside of the roof deck sprayed with 5-6" of expanding foam. Air tight, and makes the attic climate controlled. So better AC, storage options, and MUCH easier for subsequent renovation. Not cheap, but over all benefits in total "seem" to make it well worth it.
So then the garage part. I just got through repairing water damaged ceiling caused by a leaking swamp cooler line. Fixing the leak was a mofo. Unlike the house which is nice old school open rafter construction, the shop is engineered truss construction. The leak was over 20' from the access, and you can't go through the lower truss openings because of the 20"+ insulation (combination of bat on the bottom, and blown on top). So I had to make like lizard man with knee pads to hobble my way through the upper cross opening. I then decided to add a ceiling fan and some overhead electrical outlets. I should have just shot myself in the head, it would be easier. Can't move around in the trusses, can't find the wires in the fiberglass. I finally got the ceiling fan done, but mainly because there was already a junction box there that I found behind the damaged sheet rock that I removed. I finally just gave up on the outlet boxes, maybe I'll run them surface mount conduit, or just deal with tripping over extension cords.
Anyway, this got me thinking maybe I see how much extra they will charge to blow the attic of the shop too. Just think how easy it would then be to run new circuits, attic storage, and other options. I might even just drop the entire sheetrock ceiling out. Easier (and cheaper?) to do the spray insulation, not to mention other changes later. I doubt the price will be worth it for the shop, but I can't be the first person who considered it. I'm going to call first of the week to get them to add an option to their quotes to do both.
So, any of you go this route in house and/or garage? If so, how did it work out?
I've got an older house that I'm fixer-upper-ing. That includes some restructuring and rewiring in the near future, which involves swimming through about 20" of blown fiberglass insulation looking for wires and so on. And oh what fun when we have to drop some of the ceiling. Also, here in Phoenix, summer attic temperatures can get totally ridiculous. And even though I've wrapped/sealed my split AC attic units and ducts, it blows HOT air for over a minute when it kicks on. So my plan is to have the underside of the roof deck sprayed with 5-6" of expanding foam. Air tight, and makes the attic climate controlled. So better AC, storage options, and MUCH easier for subsequent renovation. Not cheap, but over all benefits in total "seem" to make it well worth it.
So then the garage part. I just got through repairing water damaged ceiling caused by a leaking swamp cooler line. Fixing the leak was a mofo. Unlike the house which is nice old school open rafter construction, the shop is engineered truss construction. The leak was over 20' from the access, and you can't go through the lower truss openings because of the 20"+ insulation (combination of bat on the bottom, and blown on top). So I had to make like lizard man with knee pads to hobble my way through the upper cross opening. I then decided to add a ceiling fan and some overhead electrical outlets. I should have just shot myself in the head, it would be easier. Can't move around in the trusses, can't find the wires in the fiberglass. I finally got the ceiling fan done, but mainly because there was already a junction box there that I found behind the damaged sheet rock that I removed. I finally just gave up on the outlet boxes, maybe I'll run them surface mount conduit, or just deal with tripping over extension cords.
Anyway, this got me thinking maybe I see how much extra they will charge to blow the attic of the shop too. Just think how easy it would then be to run new circuits, attic storage, and other options. I might even just drop the entire sheetrock ceiling out. Easier (and cheaper?) to do the spray insulation, not to mention other changes later. I doubt the price will be worth it for the shop, but I can't be the first person who considered it. I'm going to call first of the week to get them to add an option to their quotes to do both.
So, any of you go this route in house and/or garage? If so, how did it work out?
