Hi there!
First, if you know of a good insulation contractor in the Lexington, KY area please let me know. I have money in-hand, and I am ready to do the job (I'm not a "tire-kicker", I want to get this done soon) -- and I have had trouble getting contractors to call me back. Ugh.
I called/emailed a few insulation contractors I've found via the online version of the Yellow Pages, and had one get back to me. He stopped by today and looked at the shop, then started his pitch for copper foil radiant barrier.
He wanted to install this "space age" (his words) copper foil material in the attic of the shop, over the truss chords essentially (imagine a floor of the stuff). It's paper-thin copper foil with what I guess is nylon weave. The sample material he had was pretty strong stuff. You wouldn't tear it accidentally, I'd say.
He didn't want to do anything to the walls, claiming that most of the heat gain/loss is through the attic space, so that's what you bother insulating.
His quote came in at well over $5000 even after his "sign up NOW!!!!" discounts, for my 36x50 shop. He put the hard-sell on, which immediately turned me off, and the price was the final nail in his coffin with me.
That said, I've seen this stuff for sale in aluminum and it seems interesting. Any experience with it?
Here's a place that sells the aluminum-based stuff. Other than a Google search I don't know anything about this place: http://www.atticfoil.com/
I was considering blown cellulose or spray foam (or a combination of the two), but was thinking the foil may at least be a compliment to insulating the place.
For regular insulation, the walls are 6" deep (6" wood posts, steel-siding/roof pole barn) and I've studded out the walls flush with the posts so the 2x4 studs don't go all the way out to the metal. That should give a nice uninterrupted blanket in the walls if I blow material in. The ceiling height is 9', and I was originally planning on blowing in cellulose or foam up there, too.
The building is currently wrapped in vinyl faced fiberglass, about 1" thick I'd guess, on the walls between the steel siding and the girts, and between the roof metal and the purlins. It's not in great shape -- it's damaged in quite a few places. I was going to remove it before insulating.
Thoughts?
First, if you know of a good insulation contractor in the Lexington, KY area please let me know. I have money in-hand, and I am ready to do the job (I'm not a "tire-kicker", I want to get this done soon) -- and I have had trouble getting contractors to call me back. Ugh.
I called/emailed a few insulation contractors I've found via the online version of the Yellow Pages, and had one get back to me. He stopped by today and looked at the shop, then started his pitch for copper foil radiant barrier.
He wanted to install this "space age" (his words) copper foil material in the attic of the shop, over the truss chords essentially (imagine a floor of the stuff). It's paper-thin copper foil with what I guess is nylon weave. The sample material he had was pretty strong stuff. You wouldn't tear it accidentally, I'd say.
He didn't want to do anything to the walls, claiming that most of the heat gain/loss is through the attic space, so that's what you bother insulating.
His quote came in at well over $5000 even after his "sign up NOW!!!!" discounts, for my 36x50 shop. He put the hard-sell on, which immediately turned me off, and the price was the final nail in his coffin with me.
That said, I've seen this stuff for sale in aluminum and it seems interesting. Any experience with it?
Here's a place that sells the aluminum-based stuff. Other than a Google search I don't know anything about this place: http://www.atticfoil.com/
I was considering blown cellulose or spray foam (or a combination of the two), but was thinking the foil may at least be a compliment to insulating the place.
For regular insulation, the walls are 6" deep (6" wood posts, steel-siding/roof pole barn) and I've studded out the walls flush with the posts so the 2x4 studs don't go all the way out to the metal. That should give a nice uninterrupted blanket in the walls if I blow material in. The ceiling height is 9', and I was originally planning on blowing in cellulose or foam up there, too.
The building is currently wrapped in vinyl faced fiberglass, about 1" thick I'd guess, on the walls between the steel siding and the girts, and between the roof metal and the purlins. It's not in great shape -- it's damaged in quite a few places. I was going to remove it before insulating.
Thoughts?