Selfbuildsarah Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago (edited) Advice please re fire rated mineral wool cavity closure. We will be having part timber clad and part render on our MBC timber frame airtight house. Do we need different types of cavity closure according to surface. What about ventilation? A possible builder is asking what we want! Edited 8 hours ago by Selfbuildsarah Omission
G and J Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago We are timber frame, part rendered on block, part timber clad on cement board We closed the cavities in the block with mineral wall batts and have used envirogaf intumescent strips where we are clad.
Mr Punter Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago With timber frame and timber cladding you will not get decent fire rating without further protection such as boards or coatings.
Nickfromwales Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 5 minutes ago, Mr Punter said: With timber frame and timber cladding you will not get decent fire rating without further protection such as boards or coatings. Current 3 projects (2 x MBC PH TF & 1 x stick built PH) have needed no further protection; mixes of brick / render / cedar / composite / brick slips and more. I think it would only jump if it’s a 3 story dwelling. I’m a fan of keeping the cavities clear, so intumescent strips work well here. A few ££ more but tbh this is not somewhere where you should have any kind of compromise.
Mr Punter Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 4 minutes ago, Nickfromwales said: Current 3 projects (2 x MBC PH TF & 1 x stick built PH) have needed no further protection; mixes of brick / render / cedar / composite / brick slips and more. Only the timber cladding would be a concern, as well as the "composite" if it is flammable, especially if the breather paper and sheathing are also combustible.
Owain1602 Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago You will need to provide ventilation behind both cladding types, MBC insist on it. I worked through all the details for our MBC house a couple of months ago, and put a case together for both building control and structural warranty inspectors to agree. It’s quite tricky is you want to provide proper ventilation, guard against insects, allow the cavity to drain any moisture that gets in there, conform to BR cavity barrier requirements and of course….look nice. Most examples I see just close off the heads of the window reveals, and moisture then just sit against the building. Do you have any section drawings to share what you have so far?
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