got a quote for ~1700 sq ft of blown in insulation that I think is high....just looking for a sanity check
Tell him to look at it again!CapCity12thMan said:
update - estimator did something wrong on the estimate....estimate now $2300 for ~1760 sq ft.
getting more resonable
If I were building a new house or doing a major renovation, I would go through the process of sealing the attic and making it semi-conditioned. I just makes so much more sense to have the equipment and the ducts inside the envelope...PabloSerna said:
Just a comment about attic insulation:
I've been moving away from this because it creates a "hot attic" than can damage HVAC ducts, equipment, and other issues. Been recommending sprayfoam insulation and radiant barriers for remodels. Some of the best money spent right there to make a house last, IMO.
+Pablo
Could consider some cross ducting between the bedrooms. Somewhat surprised at supplies going into the bathrooms. Not even that typical in new construction unless a large master bath. Of course, all our bedroom closets in new houses have supply registers which I know makes my dad roll in his grave. Gave up on telling the 10yo to close the closet doors, which earned me some belt whips growing up.CapCity12thMan said:
30 year old house in Austin TX. We had to add a return into the master bedroom a few years ago and re-duct, as there was one 12" duct splitting off a cheese wedge into 4 smaller ones - two 8" (MBR) and two 6" (MBATH/closet). There was no return originally so air was never getting pulled out. We added the return, and then instead of one 12" supplying 4, we did I think a 12" that split into 2 8" for the room and another 12" (or maybe a 10") that split into two 6" for the bath. Solved the problem.
Now with covid, and both of us likely not heading into the office for at least the summer, we bought a desk and put it in the guest room for a second office. With the door closed for office privacy, getting the same stuffiness in there working all day. Sure enough there is one 12" spitting off a cheese wedge to 4 others - 2 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms...no returns.
Debating on re-ducting, or just adding a return to the one room that is the all day problem. The other bedroom is fine, since it is not occupied 12-14 hours per day, but only for sleep and the baths are not an issue either.
The best thing we could do is get more insulation and new windows - they're drafty
I have this same question as well. Current insulation is almost 20 years old and has plenty of mouse **** all in ittexan12 said:
What's the lifespan of cellulose and fiberglass insulation? Is it that necessary to vacuum out instead of just adding?
If your attic access is in the garage, you should see little to no dust inside your home, depending on how well sealed your ceiling penetrations are. If you have attic access inside your home, they should put up a temporary enclosure around it to keep the dust from spreading.aggiemike02 said:
how disruptive was it to the living areas of you house? dust all over or relatively no impact.