allthatpebbledash Posted yesterday at 17:57 Posted yesterday at 17:57 (edited) What’s the best way to fill a 150mm cavity with insulation? Should I partially fill it and go with 100mm PIR with 50mm gap as is being suggested? Wall build up intention here; Clayworks plaster or paint Plasterboard dot dab 100mm block not specced yet 150mm cavity 100mm block not specced yet Render by Baumit I think Theres scope for a wider cavity to be honest but architect is saying going wider would increase costs as majority of ties and other ancillaries or all geared for 150mm cavity’s. I’m not keen on blown EPS beads. Editing to add, the roof is a pitched roof, gable end to end. Intention is a cold roof, with loft roll above joists then boarded over for loft storage. Edited yesterday at 18:10 by allthatpebbledash Roof info
ADLIan Posted yesterday at 18:21 Posted yesterday at 18:21 Built in mineral wool slabs. 150mm now a standard thickness 1
Iceverge Posted yesterday at 19:15 Posted yesterday at 19:15 Mineral wool batts. Absolutely not put boards. They're next to impossible to install properly in the real world 2
Andeh Posted yesterday at 19:58 Posted yesterday at 19:58 1 hour ago, Mr Punter said: Dritherm 32 cavity slabs. This! 1
Oz07 Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago (edited) Ive had pumped before and slabs. Id be interested as to what is better around cavity trays. Do pumped beads or dritherm work their way around all the folds and lintels? Pumped used to be cheaper at one point but then slabs became cheaper again. I find its easier to keep cavity clean of mortar with slabs. The compo just drops down onto last row of bats and clean it off. When you have an open cavity it drops right down to the bottom. Edited 17 hours ago by Oz07
allthatpebbledash Posted 7 hours ago Author Posted 7 hours ago 21 hours ago, ADLIan said: Built in mineral wool slabs. 150mm now a standard thickness Which ones? 20 hours ago, Iceverge said: Mineral wool batts. Absolutely not put boards. They're next to impossible to install properly in the real world Which ones? 21 hours ago, Mr Punter said: Dritherm 32 cavity slabs. Why this?
Redbeard Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago 1 hour ago, allthatpebbledash said: 21 hours ago, Iceverge said: Absolutely not put boards. They're next to impossible to install properly in the real world Which ones? I suspect 'put boards' should read PIR boards.
Iceverge Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 1 minute ago, Redbeard said: I suspect 'put boards' should read PIR boards. Correct . Thanks.
Mr Punter Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 16 minutes ago, Iceverge said: Correct . Thanks. Proper rough job. It would still be rough without the rigid insulation, which elevates it to farcically bad.
Mr Punter Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago 1 hour ago, allthatpebbledash said: Why this? The Dritherm 32 slabs are easy for the bricklayer to fit, easy for wall ties, decent u-value, don't make a mess if the wall gets drilled and easy to clean up mortar droppings. EPS beads are good too but you said you are not keen on them.
allthatpebbledash Posted 5 hours ago Author Posted 5 hours ago 23 minutes ago, Iceverge said: Correct . Thanks. Wow that’s shocking. Can you help what wool batts I should be looking at?
JohnMo Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago XPS poly beads, every gap is filled around the whole building, any damp gets in the poly beads allows it to drain away. Easy
DannyT Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago I’m a bricklayer. Just had planning approved for south Scotland. Was told rigid boards (PIR) is the standard with 50mm air gap. I sent a email over to building control about having Dritherm 32 fulfill along with the BAA certification. They replied saying I can go ahead with it as long as installed to manufacturers standards. There was no way I would do PIR. Even on my own build taking all the time in the world it would be a nightmare to install. Looks great on a drawing but it just don’t happen in real life and when the bricklayers not getting paid much to take the time you end up with a right mess as shown in photos above. It repels moisture too so won’t get through the cavity, even in exposed locations like mine. 1
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