travisn1
Well-known member
Of course the 'perfect' house had to be a cape cod. Now I'm dealing with the repercussions.
I'm a few rows into putting fiberglass insulation in the ceiling of my garage when a friend comes over and tells me I should put the foam vent baffles to allow moisture to leave the underside of the plywood.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Owens-Corning-Raft-R-Mate-Attic-Vent-22-1-2-in-x-4-ft-70RM/204848302
Since I don't have eaves and there isn't any existing venting it's my belief that if you don't allow for air to get in, it won't create flow to carry the moisture out.
I've installed 'rafter ties' a few feet from the peak to give me a flat spot for a ceiling fan, so there will be a volume of air at the top that would facilitate venting.
Would the theory be that moisture would collect during the winter then evaporate during the summer? Anything else I'm forgetting?
I had planned today for finishing the insulation but no, I'm sitting on the computer frustrated because home depot is closed so I can't purchase the baffles.
I'm a few rows into putting fiberglass insulation in the ceiling of my garage when a friend comes over and tells me I should put the foam vent baffles to allow moisture to leave the underside of the plywood.
https://www.homedepot.com/p/Owens-Corning-Raft-R-Mate-Attic-Vent-22-1-2-in-x-4-ft-70RM/204848302
Since I don't have eaves and there isn't any existing venting it's my belief that if you don't allow for air to get in, it won't create flow to carry the moisture out.
I've installed 'rafter ties' a few feet from the peak to give me a flat spot for a ceiling fan, so there will be a volume of air at the top that would facilitate venting.
Would the theory be that moisture would collect during the winter then evaporate during the summer? Anything else I'm forgetting?
I had planned today for finishing the insulation but no, I'm sitting on the computer frustrated because home depot is closed so I can't purchase the baffles.
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