wildman
Member
Howdy all.
I am new here so if I have posted this in the wrong area I am sorry.
I have a 24X30x8' garage that I need to insulate and wire. I had at first hoped there was some way for me to keep the rafter area open. But now everything I am reading says I can't do that??
I really need someone to explain to me the what the vapor barrier is and how I need to install the flutes or what ever they are.
So what I now understand is that I need to put a ceiling in, put insulation on top of that and then put some type of flute at the end of each truss to keep the area above teh ceiling the same temp as out side? There really isn't a lot of space up in the trusses so trying to make it a storage area I don't think would be worth the time.
Can I put the insulation up first and then the ceiling so I don't have to try and crawl up inside to lay it down? And if I put in some R30 insulation is there a reason to blow in some more insulation on top?
I live in Central Washington where we see 0-30 degrees most of the winter. The garage is more a work shop for me and my vehicles. I would like to put a 4,000-5,000 BTU electric heater in to keep it at 40 degrees and then maybe use a wood stove or pellet stove to warm it up when I want to work?? I have a garage refrigerator and am also looking at getting a freezer which is why I would like to keep it heated above freezing.
I know I am all over the place with my questions. I am new to all this stuff and trying to learn as I go.
I am new here so if I have posted this in the wrong area I am sorry.
I have a 24X30x8' garage that I need to insulate and wire. I had at first hoped there was some way for me to keep the rafter area open. But now everything I am reading says I can't do that??
I really need someone to explain to me the what the vapor barrier is and how I need to install the flutes or what ever they are.
So what I now understand is that I need to put a ceiling in, put insulation on top of that and then put some type of flute at the end of each truss to keep the area above teh ceiling the same temp as out side? There really isn't a lot of space up in the trusses so trying to make it a storage area I don't think would be worth the time.
Can I put the insulation up first and then the ceiling so I don't have to try and crawl up inside to lay it down? And if I put in some R30 insulation is there a reason to blow in some more insulation on top?
I live in Central Washington where we see 0-30 degrees most of the winter. The garage is more a work shop for me and my vehicles. I would like to put a 4,000-5,000 BTU electric heater in to keep it at 40 degrees and then maybe use a wood stove or pellet stove to warm it up when I want to work?? I have a garage refrigerator and am also looking at getting a freezer which is why I would like to keep it heated above freezing.
I know I am all over the place with my questions. I am new to all this stuff and trying to learn as I go.