vavet
Well-known member
I was always told residential framing wa supposed to be 16 inches on center. This seems to be a good rule of thumb, but it’s far from gospel.
I’ve seen a lot of variance in the small unfinished bathroom to be in our home since I’ve been working on that, but it’s a small space, so I figured that had something to do with it.
I had a detached garage (24x32) built last year by a different builder. I’ve been looking into insulating and drywalling that so I can air condition it. I started looking at the width of the cavities. It varies quite a bit from one cavity to the next. Is this just sloppy craftsmanship? Is it typical?
Batt insulation is cut to a certain width, whether it’s mineral wool or fiberglass. As I understand it, one of the advantages of mineral wool is that it has more shape to it than fiberglass so you have push it into the cavity, if the cavity is too big, then it won’t work!
I’m wondering if I just need to use blow-in insulation to make the whole thing easier.
I’ve seen a lot of variance in the small unfinished bathroom to be in our home since I’ve been working on that, but it’s a small space, so I figured that had something to do with it.
I had a detached garage (24x32) built last year by a different builder. I’ve been looking into insulating and drywalling that so I can air condition it. I started looking at the width of the cavities. It varies quite a bit from one cavity to the next. Is this just sloppy craftsmanship? Is it typical?
Batt insulation is cut to a certain width, whether it’s mineral wool or fiberglass. As I understand it, one of the advantages of mineral wool is that it has more shape to it than fiberglass so you have push it into the cavity, if the cavity is too big, then it won’t work!
I’m wondering if I just need to use blow-in insulation to make the whole thing easier.

