Has anyone had experience with Tiger foam in specific? I have read a good bit on Spray foam, and the professional stuff as well as the ability to rent the equipment. Tiger's system sounds like a decent value. I'd love to hear from someone who has used their product or something similar before.
http://tigerfoam.com/sprayfoaminsulation/technical/data-sheets/
I have two projects to complete still, my garage roof and I'm gutting a room on my upper floor and redoing the insulation, and I'd like to spray foam it. DIY was not on the list till the bill was over 7,000, so now it is looking lucrative.
On their 600bd/ft kit, one board foot is 12"x12" 1" thick, correct? So for 3" you'd be at 200sq ft worth of coverage? I'm looking at going with 3" of coverage as suggested by my contractor, he felt though I could go for R28 at 4", at 3" it is already highly effective. I think I would need about 800 sq feet, but am not sure at this time. The idea is to strip the walls/celling, knock out a window, bring in the sheetrock through said window, then install the new window/rebuild wall, then insulate and sheetrock. The whole project wasn't too expensive till looking at spray insulation, which will help the poor heat retention the upper floor has.
Cheers, all.
Nick
p.s. I can never post again, 123 posts. perfect. or shoot for 1234.
http://tigerfoam.com/sprayfoaminsulation/technical/data-sheets/
I have two projects to complete still, my garage roof and I'm gutting a room on my upper floor and redoing the insulation, and I'd like to spray foam it. DIY was not on the list till the bill was over 7,000, so now it is looking lucrative.
On their 600bd/ft kit, one board foot is 12"x12" 1" thick, correct? So for 3" you'd be at 200sq ft worth of coverage? I'm looking at going with 3" of coverage as suggested by my contractor, he felt though I could go for R28 at 4", at 3" it is already highly effective. I think I would need about 800 sq feet, but am not sure at this time. The idea is to strip the walls/celling, knock out a window, bring in the sheetrock through said window, then install the new window/rebuild wall, then insulate and sheetrock. The whole project wasn't too expensive till looking at spray insulation, which will help the poor heat retention the upper floor has.
Cheers, all.
Nick
p.s. I can never post again, 123 posts. perfect. or shoot for 1234.
