ToolsRCool
Well-known member
New build coming soon, I'd like to invite the band to beat this one up due to my lack of knowledge on such:
1. Roof peak may end up being a ridge beam vs ridge board. Beam may be 5" or so wide LVL, glulam, etc......, 24' span. If so, and I want to use a ridge vent, can it (both) be done? I could attached the rafter boards so their top peak is 1" or so above the beam, but I am not sure that is code compliant? Looks a little goofy, but would work. Or, leave the roof sheathing 1" or so down from the ridge beam edge, but then that would require a ridge vent that is wider than traditional, not sure such is available? Found same topic posted in 19', but his was already built top-flush.
2. Looks like the latest craze is to use rafter baffles on the underside to provide an isolated vent channel from the eaves to the peak (ridge vent), along the underside of the sheathing, a natural flow concept. You can then install fiberglass insulation or what you want over this. If I do this, is there any way to also vent the warm air out of the general area underside of the roof peak through the ridge vent as well? Will have a 2nd floor, so predicting warm up there in the summer. Could it make sense to alternate what runs to the ridge vent, per cavity? Meaning one cavity vents ambient warm room air freely to the ridge vent, next one is the channel baffle vent from the eave, then repeat? It will probably end up all rafter baffles, and then with just gable end vents and opposite end gable end fans for the general 2nd story area, or vents in both gable ends with a decently powered roof vent fan up on the shingles.
Open to ideas and what not to do as well. Not a spray foam guy, like to always be able to make easy changes in wiring, etc......so likely just kraft faced fiberglass rolls. Poly sheet vapor barrier on the underside of the rafters as well as the side walls?
1. Roof peak may end up being a ridge beam vs ridge board. Beam may be 5" or so wide LVL, glulam, etc......, 24' span. If so, and I want to use a ridge vent, can it (both) be done? I could attached the rafter boards so their top peak is 1" or so above the beam, but I am not sure that is code compliant? Looks a little goofy, but would work. Or, leave the roof sheathing 1" or so down from the ridge beam edge, but then that would require a ridge vent that is wider than traditional, not sure such is available? Found same topic posted in 19', but his was already built top-flush.
2. Looks like the latest craze is to use rafter baffles on the underside to provide an isolated vent channel from the eaves to the peak (ridge vent), along the underside of the sheathing, a natural flow concept. You can then install fiberglass insulation or what you want over this. If I do this, is there any way to also vent the warm air out of the general area underside of the roof peak through the ridge vent as well? Will have a 2nd floor, so predicting warm up there in the summer. Could it make sense to alternate what runs to the ridge vent, per cavity? Meaning one cavity vents ambient warm room air freely to the ridge vent, next one is the channel baffle vent from the eave, then repeat? It will probably end up all rafter baffles, and then with just gable end vents and opposite end gable end fans for the general 2nd story area, or vents in both gable ends with a decently powered roof vent fan up on the shingles.
Open to ideas and what not to do as well. Not a spray foam guy, like to always be able to make easy changes in wiring, etc......so likely just kraft faced fiberglass rolls. Poly sheet vapor barrier on the underside of the rafters as well as the side walls?
