william wrote: » One other question. What working space would you think the contractor would need? If the ewi was say 4 inches would it be an additional 6 inches? And would the base of the ewi need to be sealed to stop moisture travelling upwards behind the insulation?
william wrote: » Ours is a suspended ground floor. below the bottom of the crawl space (which I presume is earth as it's an old house) un
dathi wrote: » how are you insulating your suspended timber floors?
listermint wrote: » Depends on the insulation mine is to be 200mm so plan to have another 100mm in there which will fill with aggregate afterwards. As for the moisture no the normal damp proof course will protect the brick work as before and the ewi that goes below ground should be spec to be emersed in water.
william wrote: » Dudda/Listermint Thanks for the replies. Really interesting. Also interesting that the depth varied between 300mm and 500mm. Ours is a suspended ground floor. How do you think one could calculate how deep to run the external insulation? What's the reference point, as in should it be say 500mm below the internal floor level or say 300mm below the bottom of the crawl space (which I presume is earth as it's an old house) under the suspended floor? Would you have any photos or drawings by any chance? William
Dudda wrote: » I dug out all our footpaths and went down a min of 300mm and probably 500mm on average. It's a large detached 1980 house. I was moving out a lot of the rainwater drainage pipes and downpipes too. It is a lot of work and I calculated the thermal bridge for my house and it was worth it. Cost wise it wasn't huge as we were replacing paving and patio and I dug everything myself. Only a very small extra cost for the insulation going down further.
william wrote: » I'm not. It would be a huge job as most floors are tiled over or have parquet flooring put on timbers.
air wrote: » The suspended floors remove a lot of the justification for insulating down to the footings IMO. The wall is going to lose all it's heat from the other side anyway as the space has to be ventilated and thus will be cold.
listermint wrote: » Sorry but that is not true at all whatsoever. Just because a floor is suspended doesnt automatically make it more thermally efficient.
BryanF wrote: » are you filling in the ground floors with insulation and concrete?
william wrote: » Hi Bryan. Doing nothing with the ground floor. It's timber boards with 33cm void above earth (I assume). Void has vents to the external.
william wrote: » Would some form of trickle vent overcome the loss of heat issue?
air wrote: » No, if a space is ventilated to outside it's going to be at the outside air temperature more or less. IMO insulating down to the footings doesn't make sense unless you insulate the other side of the walls from the crawl space which doesn't sound practical in this case. I've heard of people fitting insulation crawling through the space under the floor on their backs but it's not a job I'd fancy.
william wrote: » Thanks everyone. It may be possible to insulate some of the floors in a few years time as part of another project. From reading the Kingspan brochure (http://www.kingspaninsulation.ie/getattachment/b9b1aa6b-1f43-451c-913c-2a2530c6bff7/Kooltherm-K3-Floorboard.aspx?disposition=attachment) it appears that the external insulation should run 200mm below the floor boards, which in our case should be around ground level. Would you agree with this? Many thanks, William
william wrote: » Thanks everyone. We are going to take your advice on board and insulate under the floors. Will look into how to go about this further but one immediate question is what to do with central heating pipe runs which are down in the crawl space? William