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Pole Building Insulation

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Coyote556

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Joined
May 6, 2013
Messages
108
Location
The Show-Me State
I am in the process of building and that is what I will be using. I will be putting a vapor barrier over the 8' batts, then interior perlins and then metal on the inside.
 

Highbeam

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Joined
Feb 15, 2011
Messages
2,292
Location
Mt Rainier foothills, WA
Batts are pretty tough to get right. You need them to fill the cavity left to right and top to bottom without gaps as a blanket would be. You need them to stay that way and not sag to the ground. With an 8' wide roll, how would you hold it up to prevent it from sagging into a pile?
 

Rookie2

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Joined
Feb 27, 2013
Messages
1,925
Location
Western Pa.
i used finish nails on mine to support the weight. make it air tight because outside wind will blow through the metal lap joints and into the insulation. I used house wrap on the outside.
 

jomobco

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Joined
Nov 12, 2010
Messages
436
Location
Denver, CO
Batts are pretty tough to get right. You need them to fill the cavity left to right and top to bottom without gaps as a blanket would be. You need them to stay that way and not sag to the ground. With an 8' wide roll, how would you hold it up to prevent it from sagging into a pile?

design your building the run the insulation horizontal instead of vertical. Then you have 8' bats running 8' on center or 12' on center between your posts instead of a 14' run straight down. Just a thought.
 

smokem2020

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Joined
Jul 21, 2011
Messages
92
Location
Rossville In
My builder used 2 1x4s sandwiching the insulation, screwed together. Then hanging the bats using joist hangers to the posts. I didn't think it worked all that well. Lots of air blew in under the metal inside next to the floor.

My latest garage, I cut blue 2" foam to go between post. stacked them 3 pieces high, staggered the joints. Foamed them with window foam to fill ribs on outer metal. Then installed vapor barrier. Then installed metal on inside. I blew insulation in from top. The ceiling metal wasn't up yet. Later when I blew insulation in ceiling, I blew lots of extra next to walls so it would settle in.

All my wiring is in conduit surface mounted.
 

rieferman

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Joined
May 18, 2009
Messages
2,586
Location
Collegeville PA (30 min west of Philly)
When I worked in the industry the builder I worked for (large builder, over 30 years in business) preferred 24" wide batts. Exterior girts to hold siding, interior girts to hold wall finish, and the batts would be a snug fit between. Butted side by side. HVAC pros would routinely tell me that our buildings were tight and energy efficient, and install process was easy. No sagging. Also, with post frame like I describe here there are fewer thermal bridges to reduce efficiency.
 
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bullnerd

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Sep 17, 2012
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5,690
Location
Jersey
I bought from Morton also. My local building supplier couldnt even get the 8' wide stuff. Go back and look at the pics of the hangars I made. It doesnt get any easier/faster than that. I was able to hang the 8x10 blankets all alone. Push the cleat up between the top girts and twist it to hang, done! This will change depending on your building though, Mine is a Pioneer ,it has double "plates" on the top.

I agree with Reiferman,less thermal bridging also.

Also watch the video on the Morton website on their energy saver insulation,shows it pretty good.

OH, and I added some pics to my thread.
 
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SI86

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Aug 30, 2013
Messages
71
Location
Pennsylvania
I bought from Morton also. My local building supplier couldnt even get the 8' wide stuff. Go back and look at the pics of the hangars I made. It doesnt get any easier/faster than that. I was able to hang the 8x10 blankets all alone. Push the cleat up between the top girts and twist it to hang, done! This will change depending on your building though, Mine is a Pioneer ,it has double "plates" on the top.

I agree with Reiferman,less thermal bridging also.

Also watch the video on the Morton website on their energy saver insulation,shows it pretty good.

OH, and I added some pics to my thread.


I do like how you went and did yours. Ill have to look into mortons
 
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SI86

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Aug 30, 2013
Messages
71
Location
Pennsylvania
When I worked in the industry the builder I worked for (large builder, over 30 years in business) preferred 24" wide batts. Exterior girts to hold siding, interior girts to hold wall finish, and the batts would be a snug fit between. Butted side by side. HVAC pros would routinely tell me that our buildings were tight and energy efficient, and install process was easy. No sagging. Also, with post frame like I describe here there are fewer thermal bridges to reduce efficiency.

So do you use a vapor barrier off the Metal side to keep the Batts dry when the metal sweats?
 

bullnerd

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Sep 17, 2012
Messages
5,690
Location
Jersey
First I want to make it clear, I'm not an HVAC expert, I'm just relaying what I've learned from reading lots of building mags and books and what I've read on this site doing research for my own pole barn. I take no responsibility in what you do with your building.

Mod9, the idea is to keep the moist heated air inside from touching the cold outside surfaces. This causes the the moist air to condense, build up on the metal and cause all the problems..dripping,moldy insulation, etc.

If I'm wrong one of the experts please correct me.
 
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SI86

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Aug 30, 2013
Messages
71
Location
Pennsylvania
Reason I asked about the vapor Barrier is... The outside Metal is going to sweat with the sun beating on it... And with the insulation against it I was concerned that it would absorb the moisture.

So from what your saying with the heated side of the garage... It makes scense too so maybe just put a vapor barrier on both sides??

I was told to leave air space for the metal to breath...But Im like you Im just going by what I have been told aswell. haha
 

Autorotica

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Joined
Oct 21, 2012
Messages
526
Location
SE Pa
SI86, your backwards in your understanding.

Condensation occurs when warm air meets cool surface. If you stop the humidity in the air on the heated side, it doesn't condense out when it gets to the cold outside surface.


Chris
 
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SI86

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Aug 30, 2013
Messages
71
Location
Pennsylvania
SI86, your backwards in your understanding.

Condensation occurs when warm air meets cool surface. If you stop the humidity in the air on the heated side, it doesn't condense out when it gets to the cold outside surface.


Chris

Science was never my strong subject in school haha. Thanks Autorotica
 
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SI86

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Joined
Aug 30, 2013
Messages
71
Location
Pennsylvania
Well I called Morton Buildings and they have exactly what I need. 7' 8" Batts and the pricing isn't bad at all either!
 
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