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Understand your point but sure either doesn't read that way or is just unclear. I do think that in a house with rafters or even trusses without the raised heel that the compressed area is a lot more than just the wall stud depth, especially after vent baffles. A roof at 5/12 or near that and 2x6 or even 2x8 rafters, there's not room for 10 1/2" and 1 1/2" vent very close to wall, let alone exterior face. I finished a garage with trusses and it was only 3 1/2" to deck at exterior, so at least 18 to 19" from exterior surface, if not 2'. (I built a sloped soffit inside so I had 24" parallel to roof and pumped it full of cellulose tight to vent - of course way more than the required R38 or even R49.)My take on this is almost EVERYONE interprets N1102.2.1 wrong.
Where R49 is required and R38 is over 100% of the attic is misunderstood by many.
100% coverage means, no thermal bypass or bridging. AKA Continuous and not in the cavity.
The 100% does not allow for framing.
Then, the insulation must continue over the top plate of exterior walls.
Think about it....
The U for 2x10 @ 16" O/C with R49 = 0.027
The U for R38 Continuous = 0.024
(U values created with Rem Rate 16.3.4 assuming Grade 1 or perfect install)
The exemption for the less "stated" R value provides more of a reduction.
Why would an exemption be given for an area measuring 3.5" - 5.5" x the exterior perimeter ???
Understating basic B.S. allows us to discern the difference from B.S. and the other B.S... ©
Your right, and I understand your point. That said, my interpretation is that even having a loss at the top plates (with compression) the area involved is actually not that great, and also against what most believe, the R value in fiberglass per inch actually becomes greater when compressed. Add all of these factors and I intuitively feel like the difference between R38 with no loss at the perimeter is worse than 49 having the same compression (or worse) The Energy Code was actually written by some one who knows there stuff. Id have to do a model and UA calc to determine how much of a difference but again, my knee jerk says the intent is only worthwhile IF its 100% continuous. Again, insulation's resistance to conductive heat loss is like the hull of a ship. A ship with a hull that is 1' thick will sink as fast as the same exact ship with a 1/8" thick hull if we put the same size hole in both. The hole is the framing, and the exception (in my opinion) clearly understands it.Understand your point but sure either doesn't read that way or is just unclear. I do think that in a house with rafters or even trusses without the raised heel that the compressed area is a lot more than just the wall stud depth, especially after vent baffles. A roof at 5/12 or near that and 2x6 or even 2x8 rafters, there's not room for 10 1/2" and 1 1/2" vent very close to wall, let alone exterior face. I finished a garage with trusses and it was only 3 1/2" to deck at exterior, so at least 18 to 19" from exterior surface, if not 2'. (I built a sloped soffit inside so I had 24" parallel to roof and pumped it full of cellulose tight to vent - of course way more than the required R38 or even R49.)
Yes but that 8" batt compressed to 6" has less overall insulation than that same batt uncompressed. A 14" R49 compressed to fit in a 2x10 is R37. So yes R3.5/in versus R4 compressed, but a 25% reduction.the R value in fiberglass per inch actually becomes greater when compressed
100% correct with compressed values at and above the plates. I see what your saying with the overall reduction, and do not disagree.Yes but that 8" batt compressed to 6" has less overall insulation than that same batt uncompressed. A 14" R49 compressed to fit in a 2x10 is R37. So yes R3.5/in versus R4 compressed, but a 25% reduction.
I think ice dams plays into the incentive for insulation to the edge, and the insulation weakness of the typical double top plate. Add the convective loss within a typical exterior stud wall and the eave is weak point.
Its called the framing factor and is an estimate based on averages. (Why exterior continuous insulation makes such a huge difference)The top plate is part of the wall assembly and is accounted for in the wall assemble U value calculations.
Hmmm...Now that I have been in South Florida for the past 13 years, and my AC never shuts off year-round, what is the relevance to a climate zone 1
My home was built in 1969 with a combo of soffit and gable vents. Since gable vents are rare in new construction because of the wind zone which limits the percent of gable ends (most are all hip) we see mostly unvented attics but there are millions of homes with vented attics.Your attics are still vented ? Soffit vents and ridge/gable vents ?