jar546
CBO
I found this to be very informative.  What are your thoughts on this?
	
		
	
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
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Mmmmmmm....cold beer....Makes sense to me, warm move to cold, moist move to dry, if the beer cand is cold you get condensation
Vapor barrier on what side?If I wanted to insulate and uninsulated masonry basement wall where there was the possibility of moisture in the back fill - almost everywhere I'd live in US - I'd put a heavy air vapour barrier against the wall (and floor), at least 10 mil, and perhaps set that in mastic of some sort. I'd like to minimize any air pockets or gaps. Then frame inside - gapped from wall - and sheath with something that is very vapour permeable - like t&g pine. And then dense pack the cavity with cellulose. Stop the moisture on the moist side and build the wall so it dries inward.
The moist side - against the uninsulated masonry wall. This is for any place I've lived in US. I guess there could be climates where there is no moisture ever in the soil against the masonry wall, and I would reconsider.Vapor barrier on what side?
The moist side as in the outside of the foundation? A vapor barrier is already required under the slab.The moist side - against the uninsulated masonry wall. This is for any place I've lived in US. I guess there could be climates where there is no moisture ever in the soil against the masonry wall, and I would reconsider.
I thought we were talking about walls.The moist side as in the outside of the foundation? A vapor barrier is already required under the slab.
Yeah, we are, but you mentioned the slab too, so I followed through. Did you watch the entire video?I thought we were talking about walls.
I don't care about that part of the wall. I care about from the vapor barrier and in - which can't dry to outside.If the inside of the foundation has 2" of closed cell, AKA a vapor barrier, and say the typical damp proofing used in my area on the outside, Id say the foundation would dry to the outside