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Weatherization
& Conservation
Yes we can!
Francis Rodrigue
Maine Certified Energy Auditor & Weatherization Tech.
Certified Home Inspector
Leasing Agent (homes & Apartments )
Realtor

Special Thanks to Maine Housing & instructor Tony Gill


1
EVERYONE COMPLAINS
ABOUT THE WEATHER,
BUT NOBODY DOES ANYTHING
ABOUT IT ! MARK TWAIN

2
Insulation Zone Map
Blue, Zone # 6 , Hard to Heat Zone

3
House Thermal View
Blue is cold, Red is hot (Winter Photo)

4
Air Conditioner Left in Window

5
Seal the Air Conditioner

6
HOUSE AS A SYSTEM
Buildings are systemsPeriod.
Everything in a building has the
potential to interact with everything
else.
The tighter a building is, the stronger
the interaction will be.
Codes that control trades practices
were, for the most part, written when
this potential was essentially
insignificant.
YOU need to understand your house, a
House as a System Science! 7
.
HOUSE AS A SYSTEM

8
*Questions well (try to) answer !

Why weatherize?
What is weatherization?
What is the owners role?
How are specific air sealing and
insulation done?
How do I know if its done right?

9
More Thermal Images
Useful in finding hot spots or heat loss

10
Weatherization goals
Create Safe Indoor Environment
Extend Dwelling Life
Increase Comfort
Save Money/Energy

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*CONSERVATION
Conservation is the low
hanging fruit and easy to do
Every dollar you save
prevents $3 in building
expensive new power plants

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Electric Power Generation
What can we do?

13
Home Electrical Usage

14
Light Bulbs
Which one uses more power?

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Light Bulbs
Now, which one uses more power?

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Energy Star Appliances
Save on power and water!

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POWER STRIPS
When not in use, cut it loose!

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Wrapped Hot Water Tank
Flow check and timer

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Other Energy Savers
Low hanging fruit

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* INDOOR AIR QUALITY
Indoor air can be more
polluted than outside
air !
Name examples of pollution!

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INDOOR POLUTANTS
Asbestos
Biological Pollutants
Carbon Monoxide
Formaldehyde/Pressed Wood Products
Household Cleaning and Maintenance, Personal Care, or Hobbies
Lead Paint
Mercury ?
Nitrogen Dioxide
Pesticides
Radon
Resparable Particles
Secondhand Smoke/Environmental Tobacco Smoke
Stoves, Heaters, Fireplaces, and Chimneys
Un-vented combustion appliances
VOC Volatile Organic Compounds

22
Moisture Pollution

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IAQ venting requirements
Moisture is considered a pollutant in buildings
Install carbon monoxide detectors on all
levels
All combustion appliances must vent properly.
Driers must be vented to the exterior.
Garages must be cut off from the living space.
All existing bathroom & kitchen fans must be
vented to the exterior.
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Catch that lint !

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Off Gassing
Everything in the building off gasses
Carpets and upholstery
Paint and stains
Wood and vinyl flooring
Cleaning chemicals
Items stored in the garage & basement
Never store flammables inside !!!

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Paints And Other Compounds

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Weaker draft heating appliances:
Houses have: If your house is very tight, the
house vents could cause back-
drafting of exhaust gases and
a potential carbon monoxide
hazard. (CO2 detectors a must)

28
* BUILDING
CONSTRUCTION STYLES

Post and Beam


Balloon Framing
Platform Framing
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Structural details (that matter!)
Post & beam buildings can have irregular nailing
& hurricane bracing that create strangely shaped
wall cavities.
Balloon buildings have interconnected wall &
ceiling cavities everywhere. Gable end stud
patterns can be quite irregular.
Platform buildings will have a band joist at
each level.
Split level buildings can have open wall cavities
into unheated areas similar to balloon framing.
Both balloon and platform framed buildings can
have irregular fire stopping. 30
Post & Beam

31
Balloon
framing

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Platform Framing

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*SINGLE FAMILY HOME
WEATHERIZATION
Air seal (everything) 1st

Insulate attic

Insulate walls

Insulate basements

Typical savings 20%-30%


Net Zero homes ?
34
Structural Detail

35
HOUSE AS A SYSTEM
in the Attic and basement

Small holes in the attic and basement


floor at pipes, wires, the chimney
chase - allow heated air from the
living space to enter the attic.
The entering air will be relatively
warm & wet.
Moisture from the warm-wet air
condenses on the first cold surface it
contacts - typically the most northerly36
Air Leakage In & Out

37
Thermal Envelope

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Building Thermal Envelope
Consists of:
Air barrier (pressure barrier)
- Vapor (re-tarder) barrier
- Insulation barrier.
All at the same surface & in contact with each other.
Should be as simple as possible:
Least area of heat exposed to the cold.
Smallest volume of heated space.
Fewest & least difficult joints.
Weigh your options: i.e. build hatch at top of attic
stair as opposed to addressing stairwell walls &
stair treads.
39
Where to Insulate
How Much?

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Why in contact?
12 Air-tight plaster
insulation ceiling
No
Porous
insulation
By convection (stack - warm block tile
air rising), room air freely
moves through the block tile ceiling
& insulation, warming the This configuration
area between the ceilings to slows heat
the same temperature as the
room below.then
transfer, but,
The heat
given enough
radiates/conducts
time, the same
through the un-insulated
amount of heat 41
is
ceiling to the attic.
*AIR LEAKAGE

REDUCTION
Intended to:
Stop moisture (99% of moisture air carried)
The average air change of a house (1 hour)
Allows insulation particularly fiberglass to function
as rated
Makes home less drafty
Saves energy
Very detail specific (very nook & cranny)
Most easily done during construction
Insulation alone will not reduce air leakage!
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Air Sealed Windows

43
In the real world

Everything happens at once !

Stack effect, wind and


fans all pump air into
& out of a house.
Some number of holes
will leak in, while
some number may
continue to leak out,
depending
Controlling on driving
unwanted air
force strengths.
movement by plugging the
holes is key to saving energy
44
Soil
Air leakage* AKA: Convective heat loss
There are three major air leakage drivers
(1) Warm air rising (stack effect)

(2) Wind

(3) Mechanical fans & blowers (dryer, kitchen


and bath vents, heating system)

In Maine, over the winter, stack is the most influential.


Fans generally overpower both stack & wind. 45
What drives air leakage ?
Wind !
(the arrows indicate air
movement)
Wind blowing against
the building pushes
air in the windward
side and sucks it out
the leeward side.
Neutral pressure 46
plane
Air Tightening Chart
Where is the BEST place to insulate?

47
Three Atrium Doors
R=2, Hugh heat loss! What can we do?

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Where to look !

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Air Sealing Task

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Attic
Note heavy mold
& water

Attic super
connected to living &
very wet crawl space
below. Soaked insulation
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More Air Sealing
Why:
Control unwanted air movement
Save energy
Reduce future structural damage
When & Where:
Always! At heating envelope.
How:
Non-degrading products sealed in place
What surface:
Crawl: at perimeter & ground
Attic: at top of heated space
Both: in contact with the insulation 52
Breaker Box/ Wire Seal

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Foam Seal Wires & Plumbing

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Fresh Air Vent to Boiler

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Recess Light Above Shower

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* INSULATION
Fiberglass Batts
Cellulose Blown-in
Foam board or sprayed
Denim batts
Asbestos, rock wool,
vermiculite
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R value per inch
Cellulose: 3.0 (dense-pack) to 2.5 (loose fill)
Fiberglass: 3.5/in. (regular density)
Foam boards (i.e. Styrofoam): 5/in.
Two part foam: 5 to 7/in
Foam board with reflective coating: 7/in.
Glass: R= 1 per layer
Concrete: R=1 per 8 thickness

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Fiberglass Insulation Samples

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New Green Insulation
Recycled Denim

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Why do we insulate? Does it work?
Save energy Yes
Remove moisture No
Prevent condensation No
Dries up mold No
Prevent rot No
Extend shingle life Probably
Satisfy code officers Usually

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Other insulations

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Two Part Spray Foam

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Insulation requirements
Completely air-seal attics before installing any
insulation.
Fill all closed cavities (walls & floored, attics).
Insulate open attics to R-38/49.
Cellulose: dense pack all closed cavities to
3.5 lb/cu ft.
Dam all insulation away from chimneys &
recessed lights.
Dam the attic entry to prevent insulation from
falling into the living space. 64
Either ascertain that buried Knob &Tube
electrical circuits are not - & can not be
overloaded, eliminate them or dam insulation away
from them.
Tag any buried electrical junction boxes.
Never know what youll find.

65
Installing fiberglass
Friction fit batts are preferable to the foil or
paper backed product.
Slightly higher R per inch
Faster installation
Backing contributes nothing
Must be in contact with winter-warm surface.
Poor choice for open floor attics:
Expensive per R
Allows wind-washing
Takes longer to blow same area.
66
Todays terms* !
1. Air intrusion =

2. Infiltration =

3. Ex-filtration =

4. Wind-washing =

* So we all speak the same 67


Dense pack cellulose
Drill 3 hole about 2 feet from bottom of cavity.
Insert hose in wall to top of cavity.
Tune machine settings to cavity by watching
inside wall and running maximum allowable air
pressure. Set product just below hose blockage.
Snow cellulose into cavity until loosely filled.
Dense pack cellulose by slowly pulling hose
from wall. Set removal speed by sound & feel.
Push hose to bottom of cavity & dense pack.
Insulation should achieve 3.5 lbs per cubic foot.
68
Dense pack Blown-in insulation
dense pack cavities to 3.5 lb/cu ft.
Just as hard as when it came out of the bag!

69
Fiberglass vs. cellulose
Fiberglass does not absorb water, cellulose
does.
Fiberglass is lighter than cellulose.
Fiberglass does not react with metal, cellulose
can. (galvanic reaction)
Fiberglass allows air movement, cellulose
(properly installed) prevents it.
Fiberglass may be carcinogenic, cellulose isnt.
Fiberglass cant be dense-packed, cellulose can.

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*HARD TO REACH AREAS
Band Joist between floors
Knee walls
Chimney and utility chases
Built-ins and pocket doors
Fuel tank fill pipes

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Garage Attic/Living Space Below

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Pay attention to details !

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Upper story band joist (platform)
Same exposure/area as in basement.
Greater T (temp. diff) so greater heat loss.
Harder to access (in retrofit).
Air seal & insulate by:
Removing trim (inside or outside).
Unzipping vinyl siding.
Blowing cellulose or foam into cavity.

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Band Joist

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Typical gable end details Eve side similar
Band Joist (bag Trick)

76
Knee walls
& side
attics

Blue arrows show


intended air movement.
Red arrows show typical
unintended air movement. 77
Knee walls
& side
attics

Install rigid blocking sealed


in place at both points.
Seal must be made to lower
floor drywall in both places. 78
Chimney Chase

79
Another consideration

Built-ins can make you 80


Pocket doors, false walls, pipe
chase. Whats the fix?
Block the top !
The blocking should
be a hard material
drywall, scrap
plywood, foam
board, etc. - cut to
fit & caulked in
place.
Fiberglass jammed in
and sealed over
with two-part foam
works as well. 81
Plumbing Chase

82
Plumbing To Bath Tub

83
Fuel Tank Fill Pipes

84
* HOUSE ATTICS
Attic Hatches

Looping and wind washing

Attic ventilation and air-


sealing
85
Blown-in Cellulose

86
Roof Construction Terms

87
Attic insulation
Cellulose is preferred;
Reduces looping & wind washing
Recycled green product (ground up newspaper)
Generally less expensive per effective R
Requires careful preparation:
AIRSEAL EVERYTHING!
Dam insulation from chimney & recessed lights
Check K&T for overloads & isolate or eliminate
Dam attic hatch
Prevents Wind washing & looping
88
Looping
House Attic

Warm air rising constantly loops


through the insulation, picking up heat Dust 2 or 3 inches of
& bringing it up to where it can exit cellulose over the batt
through the ridge venting. insulation to reduce air
intrusion & looping
89
Wind-washing
Blowing thru sofits

Wind will also blow through


insulation, picking up heat as
it goes. Install solid blocks foamed or
caulked to sides of ceiling
stringers & top of ceiling below
to block air from insulation. 90
Windwashing (for real!)

91
Drop Down Attic Hatch, Sealed

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Why do we vent attics? Does it work?
Remove moisture Rarely
Prevent condensation No
Extend shingle life No
Save energy No
Prevent Ice Dams Sometimes
Satisfy code officers Usually
Is a hot roof better Sometimes

94
Hot Roof or Hot Ceiling
Air sealed and Insulated

95
Attic ventilation
Very arbitrary; based on a 3 house
study done in the Midwest prior to
WW II.
Does not cool roof deck.
Roof temp more dependent on
shingle color & sun exposure than
ventilation.
See: www.buildingscience.com
. 96
Ridge vent air source ?

1 x 4 matched 97
Ceilings are no different !

If the attic is floored over, air circulates inside the


closed cavity, carrying heat from the bottom to the
top where it conducts/radiates to the attic.
If it isnt covered, the heated air will rise out of the
insulation & into the attic where it escapes through
the attic venting.
Insulation type is critical. 98
Attic Stair Well

99
Attics revisited (One last time!)
The vast majority of air moving through Maine houses
during the heating season is driven by stack effect.
This can account for as much as 60% of heat loss!!
Insulating an attic without air-sealing it will not reduce
the volume of air moved into the attic by stack effect.
Insulating the attic will lower the attic temperature
causing condensation on surfaces which previously
remained above the dew point.
Adding attic venting will most likely cause even more
condensation in the attic as the relief at the top will
pull harder on the house, moving more house air up.
The ONLY reliable fix is air sealing and
eliminating the source of moisture 100
*BASEMENT FOUNDATIONS
Rubble Stone and granite
Crawl Spaces (post & pier)
Brick and blocks
Pressure treated
Poured concrete
New- Foam blocks
101
Pick your house site wisely
Why are Basements in Maine wet ?

102
Ground Pitches Towards
the Foundation

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Why Is My Basement Wet?

104
Rubble Stone and Granite
Common From 1800 to 1920

105
Post and Pier
Crawl Space

106
Brick and blocks

The Foundation Cracks,


Leans, Bulges, Settlement:
Insulation challenges

107
New Construction
Complete foundation insulation . . . $5400.00
24 x 48 (1152sf)
Estimated energy savings... $450.00/year
Estimated dehumidification saving $300.00/year
Professional mold remediation... $2000.00
Dry, warm, healthy basement... priceless

108
Pressure treated wood foundation
Not Common

109
New- Foam blocks

You can build the entire house

110
Basement box sill (band joist)
Insulation the basement (as important as attic)
Sill plate must be sealed to the foundation:
Exterior or interior ok do whichever is easiest.
One or two part foam.
Silicone caulk.
Caulk or foam all penetrations.
Insulate sill cavities with 2 foam board. Air-
seal edges to framing. (preferred method)
6 Fiberglass batts with backing caulked or
foamed to framing is acceptable..
111
Septic Drain Pipe

112
The ultimate crawl retrofit !

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*MOBILE HOMES
Have their own unique
challenges.

114
Mobile home weatherization
Long fiber (Insulsafe III) fiberglass preferred:
Lighter per cubic foot.
Wont absorb water.
No galvanic reaction.
Duct sealing a priority:
Ducts are outside the air barrier.
Typically either poorly installed or damaged in transit.
All joints important.
Eliminate factory floor return systems:
Plug all return floor register openings.
Undercut interior doors for free return air flow.
Install louver door on furnace closet. 115
Is The Leak Vent or Sky Light

116
Manufactured housing

Stack effect moves air from the basement or


crawl space to the attic, carrying moisture
from below which will condense on the
underside of the roof deck resulting in
mold & rot. 117
HUD Zone II requirements
(Three E-W zones: NC North = Zone II)
Min. of R-8 in all exterior surfaces.
Ceiling vapor barrier.
Rodent barrier.
2x4 wall studs.
Heating ducts inside envelope or insulated.
Single hung or sliders with inside storms.
Units designated for a particular zone dont
necessarily remain there.
Lots of room for improvement!118
Rodent & Thermal Barrier

119
Mobile Home Blown-in fiberglass in
the attic.
Weatherization

120
*ENERGY AUDIT TOOLS
Blower Door
Infrared Camera
Smoke stick
Vent and Duct Testers

121
* Why do an Energy Audit ?
Extend building
life:
The same conditions
that lower IAQ can
reduce building
durability.

Whats bad for you is


usually bad for your 122
The blower door
The blower door measures the volume
of air moved out of the house
under a known pressure.
Only way to accurately quantify house
leakiness.
Feeling for moving air will locate leaks.
Blower door testing is usually done by
depressurizing the building to 50
PASCAL's (PA).

123
Manometer
Blower Door Computer

124
Infrared (IR)
Sees surface temperature only
Very powerful when used with the blower door
IR alone followed by IR with BD.
First IR establishes normal cond-
ition air leakage pattern, second
IR with blower door shows what
happens under artificial air pressure.
Interpretation is key
Does not see thru walls

125
Smoke stick
Makes smoke to help find
drafts around walls

Regin Smoke Emitters


Persistent white tracer smoke--
great for checking air flow
patterns and performing leak
tests.

http://metermall.com/product
%20pages/Smoke/Smoke%20Emitters.htm

126
Vent and Duct Testers

Most homes average a


28-40% leakage in their
heating and cooling duct
system, and some
systems are drastically
worse. This can result
in an energy waste of
30-70% from you
heating and cooling duct
system.

127
Infrared Gun
Finds temperature at one location.

128
Think and be
safe !

129
REVIEW
HOUSE AS A SYSTEM 7
CONSERVATION 12
INDOOR AIR QUALITY 21
BUILDING CONSTRUCTION STYLES 29
SINGLE FAMILY HOME WEATHERIZATION 34
AIR LEAKAGE REDUCTION 40
INSULATION 54
HARD TO REACH AREAS 68
HOUSE ATTICS 82
BASEMENT FOUNDATIONS 97
MOBILE HOMES 110
ENERGY AUDIT TOOLS 117
131
ENERGY AUDIT CLASS
Next Class
Wednesday : February 25th 2009
Same time, same location
Cost $ 7.00

132
QUESTIONS

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