Eplebnista
Active member
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2010
- Messages
- 40
I have a 24 by 26 garage with cathedral trusses over a bay with a lift and storage trusses over the other bay. The cathedral trusses are insulated to R38 with cellulose. Walls are 2 x 4 framed and insulated with r-15 fiberglass batts.
The chords of the storage trusses are 2 x 6 in the center section and insulated with R-21 batts and the chords for the outer sections are 2 x 4 and insulated with r-15 batts. The center section is about 10 feet wide and the outer sections are about 8 feet wide.
Given that I only have R-15 in these outer sections, I am considering putting foamboard on the flooring in the outer sections and covering it with 1/2 plywood. If I use 2 inch foamboard this gets me close to a level floor and increases the R-value. Since my trusses are on 16 inch centers I don't load up the outer sections since heavy items don't squeeze through I am not worried about the weight.
I am in Maryland and plan to put in a mini-split primarily for air conditioning in the summer but would keep the garage at 50 degrees in the winter. The garage was built 5 years ago and is fairly tight.
My questions are:
1. Is the foamboard idea dumb? Any foamboard I would use would be rated for under foundation use and good to 25 psi.
2. Is the bump in the R-value worth it when the center section is always going to be R-21ish ?
Any thoughtful input would be most appreciated.
Thanks
The chords of the storage trusses are 2 x 6 in the center section and insulated with R-21 batts and the chords for the outer sections are 2 x 4 and insulated with r-15 batts. The center section is about 10 feet wide and the outer sections are about 8 feet wide.
Given that I only have R-15 in these outer sections, I am considering putting foamboard on the flooring in the outer sections and covering it with 1/2 plywood. If I use 2 inch foamboard this gets me close to a level floor and increases the R-value. Since my trusses are on 16 inch centers I don't load up the outer sections since heavy items don't squeeze through I am not worried about the weight.
I am in Maryland and plan to put in a mini-split primarily for air conditioning in the summer but would keep the garage at 50 degrees in the winter. The garage was built 5 years ago and is fairly tight.
My questions are:
1. Is the foamboard idea dumb? Any foamboard I would use would be rated for under foundation use and good to 25 psi.
2. Is the bump in the R-value worth it when the center section is always going to be R-21ish ?
Any thoughtful input would be most appreciated.
Thanks