Workshop Insulation

   / Workshop Insulation
  • Thread Starter
#11  
Cutting through that foam for pipe/wiring upgrades might be a bit messy but certainly is easier than cutting through 150 year old lumber. Go find a cheap "oscillating multi-tool"...or find a cheap fillet knife! As for historic integrity, costs more but there are ways to preserve your wood from foam if you want to bother but IMHO you will most likely lose some of the benefits of foam in terms of energy efficiency (probably not much)...thinking...

I hear ya...and it is a barn after all. We're not expecting it to be warm like a residence, but we also don't want our employees filing workman's comp for frost bite! The challenge in the attached barn was actually finding the pex inside the foam and tracing runs. I would do it differently next time.
 
   / Workshop Insulation #12  
I insulated my pole barn with reclaimed polyiso panels (1.5" and 2" thick). I fitted two layers between the posts, filling gaps/holes with spray foam. Then I put horizontal 2x4 nailers and fitted a final layer. Over that I put 6 mil poly as a vapor barrier and finished the inside with wood paneling and OSB sheets. When I replaced the exterior metal siding, I added tyvek under the metal to finish it off. Seems to be working well. Probably the most significant was adding the metal ceiling (under vapor barrier on the bottom of the trusses with blown in cellulose.

The one thing I would do differently is the electrical. I ran it in the walls and above the ceiling. Now I would run everything in surface mount conduit.
 
   / Workshop Insulation #13  
I hear ya...and it is a barn after all. We're not expecting it to be warm like a residence, but we also don't want our employees filing workman's comp for frost bite! The challenge in the attached barn was actually finding the pex inside the foam and tracing runs. I would do it differently next time.
I think code (or any reputable plumber/electrician) would tell you that you that you should not bury any connection where you can't get at it if you need to (e.g. my plumber refuses to use shark-bites where I might hide them behind drywall...electrical code is the same...no hidden junction boxes). Access panels are a no brainer and easy to build into any building. I see you live in Maine so your climate might be similar to ours. You can minimize the "frost-bite" somewhat by sealing the side-walls but as far as I know your problem will require you to "look up" (i.e. ceiling). If you have the potential for a thriving business, a totally enclosed space where you could insulate all walls and ceiling might cost a few thousand $$$ and you wouldn't harm that historic integrity. Use construction screws so you can dismantle it and re-use it.
 
   / Workshop Insulation #14  
I insulated my pole barn with reclaimed polyiso panels (1.5" and 2" thick). I fitted two layers between the posts, filling gaps/holes with spray foam. Then I put horizontal 2x4 nailers and fitted a final layer. Over that I put 6 mil poly as a vapor barrier and finished the inside with wood paneling and OSB sheets. When I replaced the exterior metal siding, I added tyvek under the metal to finish it off. Seems to be working well. Probably the most significant was adding the metal ceiling (under vapor barrier on the bottom of the trusses with blown in cellulose.

The one thing I would do differently is the electrical. I ran it in the walls and above the ceiling. Now I would run everything in surface mount conduit.
I "paid the guy" to install bright white steel inside my shop and used surface mounted conduit. #1 the EMT qualifies as your ground if properly installed...#2 all wire and connections are readily accessible (I ran 4" boxes around the shop using 2 duplex outlets per box...left side coming from 1 20A breaker, right side from a different 20A breaker). Most likely I have far exceeded the residential code limits but it is a shop and very rarely will one tool be used at the same time. Problem with surface mounting on ribbed steal panels...the ribs stand "proud" about 3/4" so a shim will be required if you don't to make/buy the "offset" fittings. Other than that, my ribbed steel ceiling went up over a thick layer of poly sheeting. Have part of the building that is "cold" and hired an insulation contractor to do "blow-in" to R50 from that side. The builder (no longer with us...RIP) kinda left me a problem in that he installed the ridge vent and ventilated soffits but didn't install any "dams" on the side walls. We installed thick layers of fiberglass batting (R50 in total) around the perimeter and filled the middle with blown in material. When I built it I insisted on radiant in-floor heat that my wife and I installed before the slab got poured. It's hardly cheap to heat as it is but nothing in Wisconsin is cheap to heat and I love the radiant in-floor heat.
 
   / Workshop Insulation
  • Thread Starter
#15  
I insulated my pole barn with reclaimed polyiso panels (1.5" and 2" thick). I fitted two layers between the posts, filling gaps/holes with spray foam. Then I put horizontal 2x4 nailers and fitted a final layer. Over that I put 6 mil poly as a vapor barrier and finished the inside with wood paneling and OSB sheets. When I replaced the exterior metal siding, I added tyvek under the metal to finish it off. Seems to be working well. Probably the most significant was adding the metal ceiling (under vapor barrier on the bottom of the trusses with blown in cellulose.

The one thing I would do differently is the electrical. I ran it in the walls and above the ceiling. Now I would run everything in surface mount conduit.

Thanks. Would you recap for me the progression you did from interior wood paneling out to siding, please?
 
   / Workshop Insulation
  • Thread Starter
#16  
I think code (or any reputable plumber/electrician) would tell you that you that you should not bury any connection where you can't get at it if you need to (e.g. my plumber refuses to use shark-bites where I might hide them behind drywall...electrical code is the same...no hidden junction boxes). Access panels are a no brainer and easy to build into any building. I see you live in Maine so your climate might be similar to ours. You can minimize the "frost-bite" somewhat by sealing the side-walls but as far as I know your problem will require you to "look up" (i.e. ceiling). If you have the potential for a thriving business, a totally enclosed space where you could insulate all walls and ceiling might cost a few thousand $$$ and you wouldn't harm that historic integrity. Use construction screws so you can dismantle it and re-use it.

We had the spray in work in the cellar ceiling done by someone else, and a lot of pipe and pex runs got buried (no connections though). It certainly made re-doing the heating in the house (16 radiators) more challenging.

We do plan to insulate all shop walls and the ceiling, but I'm not sure what to do about the floor (the barn sits on fieldstone piers with just a tight crawlspace). I'm thinking we'll have plenty of "refreshing air" coming up from the floor.
 
   / Workshop Insulation
  • Thread Starter
#17  
I "paid the guy" to install bright white steel inside my shop and used surface mounted conduit. #1 the EMT qualifies as your ground if properly installed...#2 all wire and connections are readily accessible (I ran 4" boxes around the shop using 2 duplex outlets per box...left side coming from 1 20A breaker, right side from a different 20A breaker). Most likely I have far exceeded the residential code limits but it is a shop and very rarely will one tool be used at the same time. Problem with surface mounting on ribbed steal panels...the ribs stand "proud" about 3/4" so a shim will be required if you don't to make/buy the "offset" fittings. Other than that, my ribbed steel ceiling went up over a thick layer of poly sheeting. Have part of the building that is "cold" and hired an insulation contractor to do "blow-in" to R50 from that side. The builder (no longer with us...RIP) kinda left me a problem in that he installed the ridge vent and ventilated soffits but didn't install any "dams" on the side walls. We installed thick layers of fiberglass batting (R50 in total) around the perimeter and filled the middle with blown in material. When I built it I insisted on radiant in-floor heat that my wife and I installed before the slab got poured. It's hardly cheap to heat as it is but nothing in Wisconsin is cheap to heat and I love the radiant in-floor heat.

Sounds pretty great! I had just assumed I'd but the wiring in the walls, but I'm rethinking that now. I plan at least four 2 duplex outlets and then probably three/four ceiling mounted lights.
 
   / Workshop Insulation #18  
We had the spray in work in the cellar ceiling done by someone else, and a lot of pipe and pex runs got buried (no connections though). It certainly made re-doing the heating in the house (16 radiators) more challenging.

We do plan to insulate all shop walls and the ceiling, but I'm not sure what to do about the floor (the barn sits on fieldstone piers with just a tight crawlspace). I'm thinking we'll have plenty of "refreshing air" coming up from the floor.
Floors/crawlspaces can be problematic and there doesn't seem to be any consensus amongst the insulation guys...some say an air gap is needed, others say "pack it full". Wait and see if an expert opines.
 
   / Workshop Insulation #19  
Thanks. Would you recap for me the progression you did from interior wood paneling out to siding, please?

Took a while to find it but here is a summary thread on the project:
http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/projects/333644-pole-barn-renovation.html?highlight=Pole

This was an old (30+ years) pole barn and very basic. Posts 8 feet spacing and trusses 4 foot spacing, 12 foot height. Nothing finished inside and minimal electrical service, which I replaced completely. I found a source of good used roofing polyiso panels. I fitted two layers of panels between the poles against the inside of the girts. Then I ran electrical in the walls (would not do again) and added two 2x4 horizontal nailers between the posts and filled between them with polyiso. Next I added a vapor barrier inside over the whole wall. I had some salvaged T-11 paneling that I installed as wainscot high enough that I could finish to the ceiling with 4 x 8 OSB.

The ceiling install was a normal metal ceiling. I installed the vapor barrier under the trusses and mounted the metal ceiling. A tip: I installed mine ribs down so I had a relatively flat surface against the vapor barrier. I'm not sure that's necessary. Since then, I've done a couple ribs up and I think I like the look better. Cellulose blown in.

The final step was to replace the old exterior siding. I pulled the old siding off, put tyvek over the girts, and installed the new siding. I used a two tone approach which minimized how imposing the building looks (it's close to the house) and also limited the size of sheet I had to handle (I did most of it alone).

Hope this helps.
 
   / Workshop Insulation #20  
Sounds pretty great! I had just assumed I'd but the wiring in the walls, but I'm rethinking that now. I plan at least four 2 duplex outlets and then probably three/four ceiling mounted lights.
For lighting I used a 4" steel box and installed 2 switches then proceeded up the wall and a 90 degree bend to a junction box 10' from the sidewall, and from there to another junction box 10' away from that. I then "ganged" 3 T8 (4 tube) florescent fixtures off each junction box (24' in total per side). With the bright white steel on the ceiling there is plenty of light. Switching each bank let's me select either side or both. Btw, while I was doing all that I also ran extra wire to the junction box that I then took to the "cold" side of the building off a separate 20a breaker. All EMT and by eliminating the separate ground wires I had plenty of room.
 

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