Joe Lstburek and John Tooley are both sold on sealing crawlspaces. I saw a short bit of "Holmes Inspections" on HGTV where they sprayed 2 lb polyurethane foam directly onto the dirt floor underneath a raised kitchen addition and sealed the crawlspace essentially turning it into (semi?) conditioned space. I think they sprayed it onto the dirt, I could be mistaken.
My question is: Does it make sense to spray the foam onto the dirt so as to avoid having to install a moisture/vapor barrier, seal it with tape and them add foam on top of that and seal it with tape.
Does anyone have a good supplier of the thick white material that the East Coast companies use on their sealed crawlspaces?
Can anyone direct me to the best practices for such a project? I'm also wondering if someone has a detail for sealing and waterproofing the 12x4 vents in the stucco.
Mr. Tooley stated that sealing/insulating a crawlspace can yield a 15% energy savings. Does anyone have experience with energy savings percentages in California's Central Valley?
It seems that sealing under houses has many benefits but where are the great examples of it done right?
Thanks,
George Matthews
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Permalink Reply by Evan Mills on April 6, 2011 at 1:22pm
Permalink Reply by Dianna Winsett on April 8, 2011 at 8:32pm
Permalink Reply by David Meiland on April 6, 2011 at 9:11pm George, one product for crawlspace VB is Dura-Skrim. I am very skeptical of spraying foam directly onto dirt, but like you say, maybe that didn't happen.
Evan, are you sure foam would give you 3 times the savings of fiber in an under-floor installation? That seems high to me. If you have a very leaky floor (like mine--old t&g fir over diagonal planks with no paper between) then maybe it's the right approach.
Permalink Reply by Mike Estupinian on April 8, 2011 at 9:58am George, I saw that episode as well. The floor was a slab they had discovered had no vapor barrirer. They had discovered that by breaking up part of the slab for a draining issue. They repaired the drain then decided to use the foam to act as a barrier before they put the flooring down. I really would like to find out if it worked, sounds like it would!
Mike
Permalink Reply by George M. Matthews on April 8, 2011 at 1:55pm The Holmes crew is busy. I watched a different episode. They opened up a "raised" kitchen floor, found no crawlspace beneath and decided to dig it out maybe 24 inches deep so they'd have access. That is where I must have gotten a snack... the next thing I saw was spraying PU foam and installation of an anti-ignition barrier on the foundation walls and then they poured a thin layer of self leveling concrete on top of the foam.
The Q is, what steps did I miss? As we know from TV, Mr. Holmes does everything "by the book".
I probably ought to buy one of Joe Lstburek's books to get it right. Unless he or Mr. Tooley are on this forum.
Permalink Reply by Dale Walker on April 9, 2011 at 1:57am
Permalink Reply by David Meiland on April 9, 2011 at 7:33am
Permalink Reply by Dianna Winsett on April 9, 2011 at 1:57pm
Permalink Reply by Glen Gallo on April 12, 2011 at 7:11am I saw the same episode. One concern I have is that I saw no drainage or stem wall remediation. It is possible I missed it. I think a wall must be able to dry somewhere otherwise the result will be a concrete wall unseen with dirt one one side and sealed behind foam on the other wetter than a sponge on the ocean floor.
Now this might be more or a regional issue on my part but most stem walls I see are buried often for most of the perimeter. We have mostly slab on grade but there are old Craftsman homes in many areas. The method most often used was dig a hole install a stem wall and back fill.
For this type of situation I believe sealing the stem wall unwise. My thought is a good vapor barrier and possibly a dehumidifier with a pump out. My climate is very dry for the most part (San Diego CA)
I welcome any input.
Permalink Reply by Dale Walker on April 13, 2011 at 2:24am The water is beading up on the rim joists on the inside. I don't believe I have condensation in the walls but I don't know for sure. The wall construction is 2x4s, R-13 batt insulation with OSB sheathing on the outside, a tar paper water control layer and then a 3/8" smart siding. I did a blower door test on the cabin after I caulked every hole I could find and the air changes was .14 so it is pretty tight I think. The guy told me if I slammed the front door, it would flush the toilet.
I am thinking I need to set a dehumidifier down there termporarily so I can dry it out enough to insulate the rim joists and seal the 6 mil plastic everywhere. Except for the tar paper, it is solid wood from the inside to the outside at the rim joists so I am thinking I have some thermal bridging issues at the rim joists and the temperature differential when it is cold outside is causing the sweating on the inside. I am about 500' from the river as well and the soil is sandy so I suspect I just happen to be in a location where I have quite a bit of moisture rising from below.
Permalink Reply by John Tooley on April 23, 2011 at 2:23am
Permalink Reply by George M. Matthews on May 2, 2011 at 9:59am My client has a 2300 sf single story house with a perimeter concrete foundation on expansive clay soil. Beyond saving 15% on energy costs will a thick sheet of plastic on the entire crawlspace (sealed) keep the soil moisture content stable enough to stop the annual movement of the soil in the California Mediterranean climate where it may not rain from May to late November?
It would be nice to have an additional selling point to a system that may cost around $7000
Thanks for any help you all can give on the subject..
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