To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Foam insulation board

z28dad

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 20, 2010
Messages
172
Location
VA
Just wanted to ask if any of you guys have used this stuff from HD.

foam.png


http://www.homedepot.com/h_d1/N-5yc...splay?langId=-1&storeId=10051&catalogId=10053

I'm wanting to use it on some of the areas on the gable ends of the scissor trusses. They sell an adhesive that is in a caulk tube to glue it to the osb.

My question is this: is it just as simple as cutting it and gluing it to the osb, and drywalling over it, or will it require maybe a vapor barrier? Just trying to think ahead, what about mold? Thanks, Russ
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

JFoshee

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 24, 2008
Messages
59
I have not used it in that application, but I have used it. My shop has two 14' x 6' barn doors and one 10' x 12' roll up door. I cut the board to fit in my panels and used silicone around the edges to hold it in place. I used the 3/4 inch board. I haven't noticed any mold on it, but it is not covered with anything either.
DSCF1129.jpg


The picture is of a boat trailer I painted, but you can see the doors in the background. The lower part gets wet sometimes, but seams to be holding up well. Hope this helps.
 

gatchel

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 12, 2009
Messages
672
Location
West of King of Prussia, PA
If you get the owens corning documents from their website they tell you most of what you are asking and then some. I believe I remember that foamular board can be used as a vapor barrier, you just have to tape the seams. I used the 2" 250 board under my concrete pad. I will be using the 1" pink on the outside of the house next spring when we redo the siding.


http://insulation.owenscorning.com/homeowners/insulation-products/foamular-150.aspx
 

Racer_X

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 25, 2007
Messages
367
Location
MI
I've been putting up lots of the 1.5 inch in one of my older barns. I will offer up a tip when it comes to cutting the stuff.
A utility knife just plain *****.
An Insulknife worked pretty good until they changed the formula for the product this summer. Now it works about as well as a knife.
This past weekend my dad lent me his sabre saw with a non-serrated blade. The blade looks like a 3 inch long razor blade.
It cuts through it like butter! Oh how I wish I would have known this six months ago.
 

jklingel

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 29, 2007
Messages
441
Location
Frbnks, AK
Sticking it right to OSB may be problematic. OSB is not good stuff if it gets wet, and insulation against a cold piece of OSB (if I understand the application) is risky. Air sealing will be absolutely critical. Insulation right against the roofing is best done w/ closed cell spray foam, I believe.
 

santagary

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
Messages
821
Location
Pagosa Springs, Colorado
I have not used it in that application, but I have used it. My shop has two 14' x 6' barn doors and one 10' x 12' roll up door. I cut the board to fit in my panels and used silicone around the edges to hold it in place. I used the 3/4 inch board. I haven't noticed any mold on it, but it is not covered with anything either.
DSCF1129.jpg


The picture is of a boat trailer I painted, but you can see the doors in the background. The lower part gets wet sometimes, but seams to be holding up well. Hope this helps.

I have two 9' x 7' garage doors in my shop/barn...what's the best way and what's the best material to insulate them on the inside (they are roll ups)?
 

Falcon67

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 11, 2009
Messages
18,371
Location
Merkel, TX
I've been putting up lots of the 1.5 inch in one of my older barns. I will offer up a tip when it comes to cutting the stuff.
A utility knife just plain *****.
An Insulknife worked pretty good until they changed the formula for the product this summer. Now it works about as well as a knife.
This past weekend my dad lent me his sabre saw with a non-serrated blade. The blade looks like a 3 inch long razor blade.
It cuts through it like butter! Oh how I wish I would have known this six months ago.

Then you're doing it wrong IMHO. You score the sheets with the knife and snap. I did my door with 2" rigid foam and figgered this out right quick. Score the line, snap, next piece. Just like drywall but without the paper.
 

Weedwaka

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 28, 2008
Messages
737
PL300 works slick with this. We used it everywhere under our drywall. Its great stuff. How big of an area are you trying to insulate ?
 

madjack

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 18, 2008
Messages
296
Location
black hills of south dakota
I have cut foam board with a 3" wide putty knife. Sharpen the leading edge. Use it like a utility knife. after scoring the board, snap it alond the score line
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

ishiboo

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 27, 2010
Messages
9,481
Location
Oshkosh, WI
Then you're doing it wrong IMHO. You score the sheets with the knife and snap. I did my door with 2" rigid foam and figgered this out right quick. Score the line, snap, next piece. Just like drywall but without the paper.

Agreed - I cut a bunch of this stuff, utility knife was MUCH better than using a sawzall. I did not have a non-serrated blade but it was a PITA :)

Basically the trick is hold the knife as horizontal as you can so it does not "snag". I also dipped the blade in some silicon lube every cut or so which helped as well. The silicon lube actually dissolves the foam (like many other chemicals.)
 

Groovy

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 23, 2010
Messages
135
Location
Eastern Shore Island MD
Yep I used that against a small brick knee wall used a utlity knife just like drywall I used liquid nails to hold it on there its been wet and beat on and still there 10 years +/-.

like ihsaboo posted as a trick to not snag I use johnsons spray wax alot, more for my table saws and cut off saws, when I need material to slide and not bind. It works well not sure about on that board but just a cheap tip on metal surfaces you want stuff to slide on.I clean it up spray it on and buff it last about a year and does not come off (on wood anyway).
 
Last edited:

venom50svt

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 1, 2010
Messages
259
Location
Upstate Ny
I wonder if a smooth ceramic blade would make a clean cut. I suppose a regular blade would make a hell of a mess with the dust. Will this foam board insulate a garage door. Regular batt insulation gives me the feeling that there is a warm blanket against a cold surface, but foam board gives me the feeling that the cold will transmit through the board and insulate nothing..... Any feelings on this???

As for making a flat surface such as a table saw slippery, rub it down with "wax paper".. Hey it works on the slide at the park !!!!!!!!!!!
 

madjack

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 18, 2008
Messages
296
Location
black hills of south dakota
Just put your hand against the foam and hold it there for 10 seconds. You will feel the heat from your hand reflecting back. Almost feels like there is a heating element in the foam
 
OP
Z

z28dad

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 20, 2010
Messages
172
Location
VA
Thanks for all the replies guys. I went to look at the foam board at hd today. I didn't get it yet, as I'm still unsure what to do. I was thinking that the 1/2 foam had an r value of 30, but I looked at it wrong. Its actually a value of 3.0. Here is a pic of where I was thinking of using it.

soffitfoam.jpg


The outside of this area is vinyl, a foam that has an r value of 1, and osb.

graveljpg.jpg


I'm planning on boxing this area in and building a soffit storage area. I'm going to start another thread to ask for some help in designing the soffit storage area.
I talked to the hd sales guy about the foam today. He said I should use regular r-13 insulation. I thought I had read that a 1/2 of foam was way more efficient than your standard r-13 fiberglass insulation. Am I wrong? Thanks, Russ
 

Racer_X

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 25, 2007
Messages
367
Location
MI
Then you're doing it wrong IMHO. You score the sheets with the knife and snap. I did my door with 2" rigid foam and figgered this out right quick. Score the line, snap, next piece. Just like drywall but without the paper.

I guess I should have explained - scoring and snapping didn't work in my situation because the boards (why?) are spaced 15.75" inches apart. Score and snap - half of it ends up at the 16 inch width because of the pre-scoring from the factory. Then I had to clean it up with a knife. That's why I was cutting all the way through.
The sabre saw saved the day. It takes about 20 seconds to cut an 8 foot length and the cut edge is as smooth as the outside factory edge.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom