Wall insulation proyect... advice is welcome!
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Sorry for the delay, my schedule often gets in the way of things I'd rather be doing -
Sen, good catch - I apparently thought the plywood was against the brick or something, thanks for calling it -
Julian, Sen's right on the money. If there is an air gap between the bricks and the rest of the construction, then only ONE side of the wood frame should have any paneling on it -
As to which bricks, I would go with the solid ones - too many problems figuring out what will happen with all those air pockets.
To review, you want two masses separated by air/insulation, the more insulation the better - one of these masses will be your brick, so you only want one other place where there is mass. This can be several layers but NO MORE AIR GAPS. Not even really small ones.
Things that will help isolation -
more mass in either or both leaf.
Thicker brick or more layers of gypsum or both.
Wider air gap, up to a foot (300mm) -
Heavier insulation, up to about 60 kG/M^3.
Hope that helped... Steve
Sen, good catch - I apparently thought the plywood was against the brick or something, thanks for calling it -
Julian, Sen's right on the money. If there is an air gap between the bricks and the rest of the construction, then only ONE side of the wood frame should have any paneling on it -
As to which bricks, I would go with the solid ones - too many problems figuring out what will happen with all those air pockets.
To review, you want two masses separated by air/insulation, the more insulation the better - one of these masses will be your brick, so you only want one other place where there is mass. This can be several layers but NO MORE AIR GAPS. Not even really small ones.
Things that will help isolation -
more mass in either or both leaf.
Thicker brick or more layers of gypsum or both.
Wider air gap, up to a foot (300mm) -
Heavier insulation, up to about 60 kG/M^3.
Hope that helped... Steve
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- Location: Buenos Aires, Argentina
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Hello Julian,
Including the RC into the construction of the wall that you have detailed in your plan we saw, will not improve your STC.It will only be a waste of money and effort. Your stud frame is already decoupled from your outer wall, so you're fine! Unless you're planning on connecting the stud wall to the brick? wall for structural reasons.In that case you would benefit from the RC as that would help decouple your wallboard from the frame and outer wall.
hope this helps
cheers
Including the RC into the construction of the wall that you have detailed in your plan we saw, will not improve your STC.It will only be a waste of money and effort. Your stud frame is already decoupled from your outer wall, so you're fine! Unless you're planning on connecting the stud wall to the brick? wall for structural reasons.In that case you would benefit from the RC as that would help decouple your wallboard from the frame and outer wall.
hope this helps
cheers
Kind regards
Sen
Sen
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Hey Sen! Thanks to KF i found the incredible site of USG, and checking his walls insulation projects i thought that the one shown below was the better for me... I know that i can not make it exactly that way beacuase i already have a brick wall and i don´t want a triple leaf wall, but i was wondering if i can use this model but taking the back gypsum panel and putting it in front of the frame... (i mean to layers of gypsum on one side, none on the other).
Let me know what you think...
btw, i don´t want to connect the frame to the wall, not al all!
Let me know what you think...
btw, i don´t want to connect the frame to the wall, not al all!
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Hello Julian,
Yeah that's fine, your theory of mass-air-mass is correct.You want to take the layer off the back of the frame and attach it to the front....that's all good.The more layers you have (more mass) the better.
But, you don't need the RC-1 pictured in your post, because you're not connecting the stud wall with the brick wall.
You would use that method if such a wall (like in that picture) was the ONLY wall between two spaces you want to isolate!In that respect the Rc would help you.
let us know if it's clear enough
cheers mate
Yeah that's fine, your theory of mass-air-mass is correct.You want to take the layer off the back of the frame and attach it to the front....that's all good.The more layers you have (more mass) the better.
But, you don't need the RC-1 pictured in your post, because you're not connecting the stud wall with the brick wall.
You would use that method if such a wall (like in that picture) was the ONLY wall between two spaces you want to isolate!In that respect the Rc would help you.
let us know if it's clear enough
cheers mate
Kind regards
Sen
Sen
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Julian,Julián Fernández wrote: Which is the best way to "attach" the wool to the frame?
What stud spacing do you have on your walls.Are they in place yet or are you about to start construction?
The good thing would be if the stud spacing was just a little bit narrower (10-15 mm) than the width of your wool panels, so you could pack the wool nicely in between the studs.To stop the wool from falling out at the back of the studs, you could probably stretch some "strings" (wire) across the back of the frame.See Paul's studio building pics here:
(scroll down to about half the page, picture taken from behind the stud wall)
http://forum.studiotips.com/viewtopic.p ... &start=800
Well it all depends how you arrange your layers of drywall,mdf, etc. whatever you'll be putting on there.Read this thread, it's all about thatShould i glue the gypsum boards to the frame or use screws?
http://www.johnlsayers.com/phpBB2/viewt ... highlight=
I would also highly recommend downloading this .pdf "Gypsum Construction Handbook"!! It's got most of things in there you will need
http://www.usg.com/Expert_Advice/Constr ... ge=english
cheers
Kind regards
Sen
Sen
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Good.Don't start any major work untill you've got everything planned out.You really don't wanna stuff anything up, so take your time.I know we all get pretty excited about getting stuff done in our studios, but it's really worth waiting a while and knowing in advance what the next thing that you have to do will be.Julián Fernández wrote:Thanks Sen! Great info! I didn´t started the construction of the frame, so i´ll do it like you said (btw, it´s pretty logical! )
I'm glad you liked the info.Thanks for the links, they´re great!
let us know how everything pans out.
cheers
Kind regards
Sen
Sen
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I agree with you Sen about planning everything before starting construction... That´s why i´m updating my plans every week, because i keep reading and every day i understand a little more of that great thing -designing and building my studio-.
So, do u think that i have to make any changes to my walls plan?
The design is the showned (brick walls coated, 10cm air gap, 10cm wood frame), i should mount the first layer using half as many screws as normal and the outer layer should have full fastening schedule used... I´ll buy 60kg/m3 density rockwool to fill the frame...
Now i think that i´m ready to start thinking about the floor and how to seal the wall frame to avoid contact with the floor...
Any other thing to remember?
Thanks!
So, do u think that i have to make any changes to my walls plan?
The design is the showned (brick walls coated, 10cm air gap, 10cm wood frame), i should mount the first layer using half as many screws as normal and the outer layer should have full fastening schedule used... I´ll buy 60kg/m3 density rockwool to fill the frame...
Now i think that i´m ready to start thinking about the floor and how to seal the wall frame to avoid contact with the floor...
Any other thing to remember?
Thanks!
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- Joined: Wed Mar 26, 2003 11:07 pm
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Hi Julian,
Yeah your plan should be OK like that.You have a great air gap there 200mm that should improve your isolation rather significantly . I'm just thinking of the rockwool density....60 kg/m3 could be ok, but I'm thinking that a bit lower density would perform better?maybe around 50kg/m3.Hope someone will chime in to give us their opinion on this one.But I think around 50 is pretty much it.Steve, anyone else?
Julian let us know what you're planning for your floor.Might get some good ideas from you
cheers
Yeah your plan should be OK like that.You have a great air gap there 200mm that should improve your isolation rather significantly . I'm just thinking of the rockwool density....60 kg/m3 could be ok, but I'm thinking that a bit lower density would perform better?maybe around 50kg/m3.Hope someone will chime in to give us their opinion on this one.But I think around 50 is pretty much it.Steve, anyone else?
Julian let us know what you're planning for your floor.Might get some good ideas from you
cheers
Kind regards
Sen
Sen