EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
Derek,
No venting of any kind would definetly lead to a green house effect!!! You have air at one tempature surrounded by air at another tempature. This will creat condensation on your walls.
Knowing this, it sounds like the cause of your moisture to me.
Condensation is formed when the water vapor that is held in the air reaches a point of 100 percent and turns from vapor to liquid. The air holds a certain level of moisture at all times. The warmer the weather, the more moisture in the air. When that tempature drops, the amount of water vapor that the air holds decreases. This is also how fog is created.
Not know how your insulation is installed, nor how your rafter work makes this hard to solve over the net.
How tight is your vapor barrier? Is there anyway to seal it up better to keep the air in your shop seperate from the air in your insulation?
This is where you problem is most likely occuring. Where the outside air makes conctact with the different tempature air on the inside through the metal of your roof.
Heating the inside air will allow you to hold more moisture in the air and stop the condensation on the inside, but it's an expensive battle going about it that way.
Venting the air above your insulation and sealing off your vapor barrier better seems like the solution to me with what I know so far.
Can you remove a section of the peak and replace it with a vented peak?
Can you create air pockets between the insulation and the roof to circulate air and vent it outside without affecting the integrity of the insulation?
Eddie
No venting of any kind would definetly lead to a green house effect!!! You have air at one tempature surrounded by air at another tempature. This will creat condensation on your walls.
Knowing this, it sounds like the cause of your moisture to me.
Condensation is formed when the water vapor that is held in the air reaches a point of 100 percent and turns from vapor to liquid. The air holds a certain level of moisture at all times. The warmer the weather, the more moisture in the air. When that tempature drops, the amount of water vapor that the air holds decreases. This is also how fog is created.
Not know how your insulation is installed, nor how your rafter work makes this hard to solve over the net.
How tight is your vapor barrier? Is there anyway to seal it up better to keep the air in your shop seperate from the air in your insulation?
This is where you problem is most likely occuring. Where the outside air makes conctact with the different tempature air on the inside through the metal of your roof.
Heating the inside air will allow you to hold more moisture in the air and stop the condensation on the inside, but it's an expensive battle going about it that way.
Venting the air above your insulation and sealing off your vapor barrier better seems like the solution to me with what I know so far.
Can you remove a section of the peak and replace it with a vented peak?
Can you create air pockets between the insulation and the roof to circulate air and vent it outside without affecting the integrity of the insulation?
Eddie