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Insulating a Pole Bldg Ceiling-Moisture Present! |
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nowaktj ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 13 Dec 2009 Location: Elk River, MN Points: 728 |
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Hey guys-I am getting ready to blow insulation into my pole building but the weather has caused moisture to get trapped between the plastic and the ceiling tin.
Should I wait for this moisture to be driven out (next spring) or would you blow in the insulation on top of the plastic and no problems will occur? I am concerned that if I insulate now, this moisture may be "trapped" for a longer period of time and cause the ceiling tin to rust. Thoughts?? Thanks in advance for the help, Terry
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D19D, D17D, WD, WC, Snobee, #83 Plow, SC Blade, 14' disk, 400 series planter, B , Terra Tiger, M Dozer w/Baker Blade, TL-12, 42S Grader, G
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shameless dude ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 10 Apr 2017 Location: east NE Points: 13607 |
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the moisture should evap if it's between the plastic and the tin. even if it did stay in there, it wouldn't rust thru for 50 years or better. i'm thinking that's why you put the plastic in there in the first place was to keep moisture outta the inside of the building?
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Dakota Dave ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 12 Sep 2009 Location: ND Points: 3969 |
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I blew insulation in mine last December when I took some panels back down to install the lights it was dry between the steel and the moisture barrier. As long as your heat source is outside vented it'll dry out.
If your using a non vented heat you'll just be putting more moisture it the building. Edited by Dakota Dave - 30 Nov 2018 at 11:27am |
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AC7060IL ![]() Orange Level ![]() Joined: 19 Aug 2012 Location: central IL Points: 3504 |
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If I'm correctly imagining how your building is designed, outside air is always going to be between plastic & tin. If that's correct, then yes insulate from plastic toward inside of building. Like already said, the plastic is your vapor barrier from outside air(natural humidity & condensation from temp differences).
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nowaktj ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 13 Dec 2009 Location: Elk River, MN Points: 728 |
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Thanks guys. I think what happened is that I have the walls insulated without the floor being concreted. I think when it turn cold all the moisture in the building kind of got trapped in there. I am going to try and blow in insulation tomorrow morning. The middle of the week here I let it air out if we had lows near 10 Fahrenheit. That seem to suck some of that moist air out. I have also put in a ceiling fan so I should be able to get the air moving.
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D19D, D17D, WD, WC, Snobee, #83 Plow, SC Blade, 14' disk, 400 series planter, B , Terra Tiger, M Dozer w/Baker Blade, TL-12, 42S Grader, G
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Gary in da UP ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 13 Sep 2009 Location: EUP of Mi. Points: 1885 |
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UP north Steel roofing on new construction has a half inch of black celotex under it for insulation and vapor barrier, paper faced fiberglass R33 finish ceiling and then insulate further if you need it, can't have too much insulation @ zero and below Celotex directly under the steel is a must have if you want dry insulaion.
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HudCo ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 29 Jan 2013 Location: Plymouth Utah Points: 3838 |
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we are going to spray 2" of closed cell foam in our roof then 2" of open cell. the closed cell will seal it up and pravide a vapor barrier also our heat is very dry
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Dusty MI ![]() Orange Level ![]() ![]() Joined: 13 Sep 2009 Location: Charlotte, Mi Points: 5058 |
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Last I knew the vapor barrier needs to be on the heated side.
Heated air holds more moister than cold air.
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917 H, '48 G, '65 D-10 series III "Allis Express"
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DMiller ![]() Orange Level Access ![]() Joined: 14 Sep 2009 Location: Hermann, Mo Points: 33503 |
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Not on steel. You want to keep the moisture/moist air away from that cold metal to prevent condensation. A couple of thoughts from around here. A insulator that foamed our home stated he sprays a open cell product directly to the underside of barn roofs. Two factors one the open cell allows the foam to breath while still keeping moist air off direct cold metal contact, two the open cell allows for drain-off of any roof leaks rather than strip the product off the bottom of the sheeting. I had simple house wrap laid across the trusses on our barn, did not fully stop condensation and dripping but is Nowhere near to as bad as a open under-skin roof at a neighbors.
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