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Lot of folks around here like an inch and half or so of spray foam on ceilings and walls, claims it really ties in the metal roofing too. I need to find out if it will go over the lining like you already have there.
Your in Cushing? I used to have cousins in Drumright, many years agoThis man is wise.
Our new Cushing property was a 1921 Ford dealership. Steel reinforced concrete. Cars on two floors. 7000 SQ feet per floor. We have the car elevator which still works.
Spray foam for the walls.
Your in Cushing? I used to have cousins in Drumright, many years ago
Ceiling...
You need to determine what that's gonna be...
If you go with ACT with batts on top of the tiles, that'll probably be very cost-efficient, quick to install with a lot of flexibility when it comes to lighting. You can use typical 2x4 LED lay-ins for general lighting, and mix it up with directional track lights on the mains. Easy to drop structural members from the trusses where needed and just cut the tiles around the penetrations. Your trusses aren't typical 2' oc which would be suitable for a drywall lid; you would need to cross-fur the bottom chords with 2x4's at 2' oc which would be a fair amount of $$ to do drywall...
Closed-cell foam is fine- but keep in mind that you're greatly increasing the volume of your conditioned envelope for the building. You're not heating/cooling "X" sf to a 10' ceiling height- you're conditioning the entire interior volume of the space (whether you put a ceiling in below is largely irrelevant)- which will require substantially more tonnage for heating/cooling. More expensive initially in terms of equipment, and larger $$ utility bills.
I would go with the ACT and R-30 batts as was suggested above. Construct a couple of 3/4" plywood catwalks (rip em lengthwise to 2' wide) and lay them at third points the length of the building. Makes it easy to add conduit, etc down the road from above. The trusses look to be about 5' oc, it'll def be "spongy" but should be OK to walk on.
The walls being vertical posts with purlins for the exterior sheathing will of course need to be infill framed between the structural posts for your interior. Personally, I'd use BC plywood instead of drywall- you can mount anything, anywhere without needing to hit a stud or add blocking. BC provides a decent finish for paint, installation is clean (use trim head screws for easy removal/replacement if you need to an area) and cost is in the same ballpark as purchasing/hanging/finishing drywall. If you choose to add plumbing, electrical , air etc. sometime down the road- and don't like surface mount the plywood is easy to remove and replace (you'd need to use batts instead of spray foam for this flexibility).
Note that rigid insulation board, and paper-backed batts cannot be left exposed under national building codes due to flammability/fire rating. You can get foil-faced batts as well as rigid board that can be left exposed- but you don't want to know what that costs...
Can you elaborate on this? ThanksCeiling...
You need to determine what that's gonna be...
If you go with ACT with batts on top of the tiles, that'll probably be very cost-efficient, quick to install with a lot of flexibility when it comes to lighting. You can use typical 2x4 LED lay-ins for general lighting, and mix it up with directional track lights on the mains. Easy to drop structural members from the trusses where needed and just cut the tiles around the penetrations. Your trusses aren't typical 2' oc which would be suitable for a drywall lid; you would need to cross-fur the bottom chords with 2x4's at 2' oc which would be a fair amount of $$ to do drywall...
Closed-cell foam is fine- but keep in mind that you're greatly increasing the volume of your conditioned envelope for the building. You're not heating/cooling "X" sf to a 10' ceiling height- you're conditioning the entire interior volume of the space (whether you put a ceiling in below is largely irrelevant)- which will require substantially more tonnage for heating/cooling. More expensive initially in terms of equipment, and larger $$ utility bills.
I would go with the ACT and R-30 batts as was suggested above. Construct a couple of 3/4" plywood catwalks (rip em lengthwise to 2' wide) and lay them at third points the length of the building. Makes it easy to add conduit, etc down the road from above. The trusses look to be about 5' oc, it'll def be "spongy" but should be OK to walk on.
The walls being vertical posts with purlins for the exterior sheathing will of course need to be infill framed between the structural posts for your interior. Personally, I'd use BC plywood instead of drywall- you can mount anything, anywhere without needing to hit a stud or add blocking. BC provides a decent finish for paint, installation is clean (use trim head screws for easy removal/replacement if you need to an area) and cost is in the same ballpark as purchasing/hanging/finishing drywall. If you choose to add plumbing, electrical , air etc. sometime down the road- and don't like surface mount the plywood is easy to remove and replace (you'd need to use batts instead of spray foam for this flexibility).
Note that rigid insulation board, and paper-backed batts cannot be left exposed under national building codes due to flammability/fire rating. You can get foil-faced batts as well as rigid board that can be left exposed- but you don't want to know what that costs...
Why is that a mistake? I don’t know HVAC stuff that well and trying to better understand. ThanksI made a mistake, I said sprayed in insulation in the walls, It's blown into the walls, They put very tight netting on the studs and put a hole in it at the top and the bottom and blow it into the walls. No chance for air gaps at all, And before they do that, They go around with spray foam and seal all the cracks leading to the outside top and bottom.
Why is that a mistake? I don’t know HVAC stuff that well and trying to better understand. Thanks
Look at the second quote here, I just made the mistake of saying sprayed, Rather than blown in.Getting the walls sprayed too is the only way to go these days, They pack it in there tight, No chance of it settling. Batts have too many air pockets especially if you have an installer that doesn't care. I have 10 foot four ceilings and had the walls and attic sprayed. My drywaller went around the garage door hardware.
Wow, R30 fiberglass batts, I've never seen an Rvalue above 10.Spray foam for the walls.
Suspended ceiling grid with R30 fiberglass batt insulation on top. Cheap plastic coated fire resistant “drywall” panels in the grid. It’s what I did in my 25 x 50 shop. It allows you to easily add stuff above the ceiling, like more electric and HVAC.
