CarCrazyRDM
Well-known member
So the insulation guys finished up today and before I ask them about this tomorrow I wanted to see what kind of input/comments I got on here regarding the following question...
The wooden I-beams are 16" or 18" deep I believe and the R30 insulation used up there is only around 8" thick maybe (just a ballpark estimate). This isn't my concern though. What I am wondering is does it matter where the air gap is? Meaning, does it matter if the insulation stays flush against the bottom of the upstairs floor or if it ends up falling down on top of the sheet rock that will be installed soon in the ceiling of the downstairs?
Here are a few possible items of interest if they influence your answer:
1) The upstairs is not insulated now but will probably be one day.
2) The upstairs will never be "finished" (sheetrocked) or inhabitable.
3) Currently there is an open staircase from the first to second floor. This might get closed in one day and/or a door installed but quite likely not.
4) I have no plans to permanently heat/cool the garage. Meaning I'll run a heater or fans when I'm out there in the peak of each season but it will not be kept at some constant temperature via HVAC.
And the reason I ask this question is the install guys quote this as "friction fit" insulation, which in the walls is fine, especially once drywall goes up. But in the ceiling, with the weight of the insulation pulling down on it, it's bound to end up laying on top of the yet-to-be-installed ceiling sheetrock, after a given amount of time and/or walking around upstairs or setting parts down etc. Hell, you can see in the pic below that some of it has already "fallen" down the bottom of the I-beams.
If this makes no difference in the temperature retention of downstairs due to it just not mattering if it's up or down... or if it doesn't matter just given the nature of how my garage is going to be used and heated/cooled (or lack thereof) then it makes no difference to me. BUT if it does matter, then I may ask them about installing some kind of retention rods, like you typically see in the crawl space of homes, to keep the insulation braced against the upstairs plywood.
But I was hoping to be armed with some outside info before I just ask company about it tomorrow. Because certainly they're just going to tell me, "Oh it will stay in place" or "it doesn't matter if it's against the plywood or against the sheetrock."
Thanks for any input,
Ryan
The wooden I-beams are 16" or 18" deep I believe and the R30 insulation used up there is only around 8" thick maybe (just a ballpark estimate). This isn't my concern though. What I am wondering is does it matter where the air gap is? Meaning, does it matter if the insulation stays flush against the bottom of the upstairs floor or if it ends up falling down on top of the sheet rock that will be installed soon in the ceiling of the downstairs?
Here are a few possible items of interest if they influence your answer:
1) The upstairs is not insulated now but will probably be one day.
2) The upstairs will never be "finished" (sheetrocked) or inhabitable.
3) Currently there is an open staircase from the first to second floor. This might get closed in one day and/or a door installed but quite likely not.
4) I have no plans to permanently heat/cool the garage. Meaning I'll run a heater or fans when I'm out there in the peak of each season but it will not be kept at some constant temperature via HVAC.
And the reason I ask this question is the install guys quote this as "friction fit" insulation, which in the walls is fine, especially once drywall goes up. But in the ceiling, with the weight of the insulation pulling down on it, it's bound to end up laying on top of the yet-to-be-installed ceiling sheetrock, after a given amount of time and/or walking around upstairs or setting parts down etc. Hell, you can see in the pic below that some of it has already "fallen" down the bottom of the I-beams.
If this makes no difference in the temperature retention of downstairs due to it just not mattering if it's up or down... or if it doesn't matter just given the nature of how my garage is going to be used and heated/cooled (or lack thereof) then it makes no difference to me. BUT if it does matter, then I may ask them about installing some kind of retention rods, like you typically see in the crawl space of homes, to keep the insulation braced against the upstairs plywood.
But I was hoping to be armed with some outside info before I just ask company about it tomorrow. Because certainly they're just going to tell me, "Oh it will stay in place" or "it doesn't matter if it's against the plywood or against the sheetrock."
Thanks for any input,
Ryan