jeff5295
Well-known member
Hey guys, I need some insulation advice from some experts.
I have a wood-framed, metal sided, pole-barn building. It’s 36 x 56 and 13’ 6” from floor to bottoms of trusses. Open trusses (no ceiling). I have about 2” of closed cell spray foam on walls and underside of roof.
For heat I have radiant floor with propane water heater. It works fine until we get down around single digit temps (F). Lately it’s been struggling to keep up. Before someone tells me that my water heater won’t work to heat a shop of that size, I have experience with this in another shop and had excellent results. The difference being traditional insulation vs spray foam. The old shop had a ceiling with blown-in fiberglass and R19 fiberglass on walls. The heater rarely ran.
I’m convinced my heat is working properly, but I’m losing too much heat from the insulation. I thought 2” foam would be adequate as it worked great this summer when using AC. Looks like I was wrong. Probably should’ve used more foam, but thought I’d give it a shot knowing I can add more insulation later at a much lower cost than foam. The 2” gave me a well sealed building so any other insulation should work great (no air infiltration).
So I’m now looking to add more insulation. I’ll probably add fiberglass batts to the walls, but I’m looking for advice on the underside of the roof. I’m thinking the best might be to add 2” or 3” foam board with foil facing (to help deflect radiant heat). This would be fairly easy as I could screw it to the exposed 2X4 girts. That stuff is fairly pricy though and I would like to consider some alternatives.
What about that foil-faced bubblewrap? I’ll have a couple inches of airgap between the girts and the foil should help with the radiant heat.
If this or the foil-faced foam is the solution, would there be any decrease in effectiveness if I add ribbed steel over the insulation to finish it off? I know the bubble wrap needs and air gap to work properly, but does it need air on both sides?
Any other suggestions? If I could find something that would provide insulation and a finished “ceiling” all in one, that would be ideal.
Would bubble wrap be something to consider on my walls instead of fiberglass as well? I’ll have about a 4” air gap on the walls if I went that route.
Sorry for the long post. Hope someone can provide some good advice. If someone would rather speak than type, I'd be happy to call. Just PM me your number.
Thanks!
I have a wood-framed, metal sided, pole-barn building. It’s 36 x 56 and 13’ 6” from floor to bottoms of trusses. Open trusses (no ceiling). I have about 2” of closed cell spray foam on walls and underside of roof.
For heat I have radiant floor with propane water heater. It works fine until we get down around single digit temps (F). Lately it’s been struggling to keep up. Before someone tells me that my water heater won’t work to heat a shop of that size, I have experience with this in another shop and had excellent results. The difference being traditional insulation vs spray foam. The old shop had a ceiling with blown-in fiberglass and R19 fiberglass on walls. The heater rarely ran.
I’m convinced my heat is working properly, but I’m losing too much heat from the insulation. I thought 2” foam would be adequate as it worked great this summer when using AC. Looks like I was wrong. Probably should’ve used more foam, but thought I’d give it a shot knowing I can add more insulation later at a much lower cost than foam. The 2” gave me a well sealed building so any other insulation should work great (no air infiltration).
So I’m now looking to add more insulation. I’ll probably add fiberglass batts to the walls, but I’m looking for advice on the underside of the roof. I’m thinking the best might be to add 2” or 3” foam board with foil facing (to help deflect radiant heat). This would be fairly easy as I could screw it to the exposed 2X4 girts. That stuff is fairly pricy though and I would like to consider some alternatives.
What about that foil-faced bubblewrap? I’ll have a couple inches of airgap between the girts and the foil should help with the radiant heat.
If this or the foil-faced foam is the solution, would there be any decrease in effectiveness if I add ribbed steel over the insulation to finish it off? I know the bubble wrap needs and air gap to work properly, but does it need air on both sides?
Any other suggestions? If I could find something that would provide insulation and a finished “ceiling” all in one, that would be ideal.
Would bubble wrap be something to consider on my walls instead of fiberglass as well? I’ll have about a 4” air gap on the walls if I went that route.
Sorry for the long post. Hope someone can provide some good advice. If someone would rather speak than type, I'd be happy to call. Just PM me your number.
Thanks!

