Hi everyone,
Got sidetracked with some family stuff but finally got this done.
With lumber prices being so low again, I bought ground rated 2x10x16's for the second row of skirting. They were a pain to install alone since they were 16' foot lengths and wet! Maybe this tip will help someone but I ended up cutting some wooden wedges and set the 16' skirt on those. As I knocked on the wedges with a hammer it lifted up the bottom skirt and forced it tight against the top skirt. I was concerned about the new bottom skirt going crazy as it dried out so I cut 2x4s and bridged between the new and old skirt to try and keep things straight. After letting the bottom skirts dry out for two or so weeks, I tarred them with foundation waterproofer. I then bought 17 rolls of 29 gauge painted + galvalume tin and went to town. FYI, I measured slightly less than 13" from the bottom of the lower skirt to bottom of the rat guard. Coil stock comes in standard widths and one of those widths was 13-5/8" so it all worked out well. The tin is tucked up under the bottom of the rat guard ~3/4" and secured along the bottom every 2 feet with stainless screws. I have attached a few pics showing what I did.
My next project is to line the inside of the skirt boards with sheet foam. That extruded green stuff that Lowe's sell. Thoughts?
Here are some of my concerns:
- Putting a single sheet of foam across both skirts. The old and new skirts are slightly different in both size and alignment so its not like we are dealing with a perfectly flat surface here. I'm worried it may crack the sheets if I span both
- Bugs.....cant find much info but will bugs eat up the foam sheet?
- How thick should the sheets be? I am definitely getting concrete next year but still torn on radiant heat or not. Even if no radiant heat, I figure perimeter insulation and some underslab will help take the edge off when its cold. FYI, it only gets down in the teen temps here in NC. Frost line is like ~10 inches if I recall.
thanks in advance for any info/advice!!!
Drew