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Studded wall and insulation question

tbz

SAWHORSE
Joined
Sep 10, 2010
Messages
1,392
Location
PA/NJ - Borderlands
So, I have a situation, asked to come in and review a site, it's an indoor archery range for a private club, being built by the membership, all volunteers.

PreFab Metal building with 2x4 wood studded walls spaced away from the metal framework, on 24" C/L for Rockwool batts, the batts they are looking to use are the R-23 5.5" deep.

So, 3.5" stud with 5.5 batts, there is enough room depth wise, but part of the batt will go 2" past the 2x4 wood stud.

What's your thoughts on this?
 
When blanket insulation is compressed, it loses its R-value
there is enough room depth wise, but part of the batt will go 2" past the 2x4 wood stud.
I didn't get the impression that would be an issue, but it is somewhat vague. I got the impression that there are basically two structurally independent systems, but not yet confirmed by @tbz
 
They will not get R-23 (are you sure it is not R-21?). When blanket insulation is compressed, it loses its R-value and will be somewhere around R-15/17 (https://insulationinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Compressed_R_values.pdf). If they need the R-23 for energy code compliance, then they need to use 2x6 studs.
I believe what it meant, Rockwool 5.5” depth equals R23. The wall assembly sounds as if it’s a stand off so no insulation compression will occur, if that is accurate
 
Thanks everyone,
  • yes, the metal building is its own structure,
  • the wood studs are structurally independent and there is 7" from face of stud to metal
  • The Rockwool #169094 is advertised as R23 x W23 x h47 x d5.5, and the bags say R23 not R21, so I am guessing they are R23 by label.
  • The building is not going to be heated above 55, I believe in the winter and the 2 bathrooms will be separate heating on their own.
  • Just an enclosed metal building with targets on one end and people standing on the other end.
  • I am not sure why we didn't leave it as a dirt floor and call it a storage building but say la vee.
 
If this is to meet the prescriptive value of R-20 for wood framed walls, I don’t think it complies without 2x6 studs. There will be a gap between the insulation batts. What would meet the requirement appears to be R-13 insulation between 2x4 studs and R-3.8 continuous insulation. That‘s sort of a technicality, though, since not much R-value is lost by not having 2 more inches of wood in the gap.
 
The space behind the batts - 7" cavity with 5 1/2" batts - will also reduce the insulation effectiveness, probably more than the 2" stud gap.
 
Tom....As long as you are using "cavity" for the insulation it is fine sticking out...Think 2x4 roof trusses with R49 batts....same same....
 
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I might be concerned by the 1.5" gap between the inside face of the metal siding and back side of the insulation. There is a chance you get some condensation in this space leading to mold issues as that water will have no way to escape. Might be wise to have a dew point analysis performed on the wall assembly.

I may also be over thinking this and its not an issue at all.
 
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