Heating Info From Warmair.net
Insulation
Temperature is a force. It is the wind. It is a wind which passes through
solid objects at different rates or speeds, depending on the physical
properties of the material it is passing thru. You can measure
this rate by walking barefoot from carpeting to hardwood to tile
flooring. The temperatures will all be the same, but will seem
very different. The tile has the highest rate and will seem the
coldest, while the carpeting has the lowest rate and will seem
the warmest. The "wind" speed is also determined by difference
in temperature. The greater the difference, the higher the speed.
A temperature difference of 40 degrees is twice as fast as a temperature
difference of 20 degrees.
Insulation is resistance. It resists the pressure of the temperature's wind.
It slows the wind down. R-value is the measurement of a material's
ability to slow the temperature's wind. The higher the R-value,
the slower the wind speed thru that substance. It takes the wind
twice as long to penetrate a R20 as an R10.
A house has what is known as an insulation "envelope." It is the total combined
"wrapper" that a house presents to the outside climate. They are
not necessarily outside surfaces, but are all of the temperature
surfaces between the inside and the outside and include doors,
windows, and wall and ceiling insulation.
There are basically two types of insulation. Rigid insulation comes in sheets
and is installed below a slab or on surfaces. Cavity insulation
comes loose, in batts, or as a mixture which can be pumped into
the empty spots created by the frame's structure. Whatever the
type used, the term R-value always refers to the same resistance
to temperature penetration.
Because the rates and speeds of temperature differ from one geographic
area to another, the requirements for home insulation will also
vary. The correct amount of insulation for a house is dictated
by the severity of the outdoor temperatures that it will be subjected
to. Most new homes are calculated as a package, with all insulating
factors mixed in together. The R-values of the doors, the windows,
and the rigid or cavity insulation is blended into a final composite
for the house. This gives the house an overall value which must
meet the standards for it's specific area.
The most recent energy codes include the efficiency of the heating and
cooling system as a factor when designing the insulation envelope.
The higher the efficiency of the equipment, the less r-value required
of the other components. A home with a furnace that is 95% efficient
can have less attic insulation, or a lower grade of insulated
window than a home with an 80% furnace. This places conservation
on a sliding scale, where the efficiency of the comfort system
can substitute for the R-value of the envelope. A homeowner/builder
has the option to spend more on the windows, doors, or insulation,
or on the heating equipment itself. But codes only dictate minimum
standards, and there is no penalty to improving upon these terms.
It is therefore to one's benefit to use higher efficiencies in
conjunction with higher R-values. One thing the codes overlook,
however; is the actual physical location of the heating and/or
cooling equipment. A furnace or air handler installed outside
of the insulation envelope (above the attic insulation or below
the floor insulation) can have its efficiency reduced by up to
25%. A 12 SEER air conditioner operating in a 140 degree attic
can be producing at a 10 SEER level. It then becomes the responsibility
of the architect or contractor to spend an extra effort on the
equipment location to derive the most benefit from the conservation
envelope.
Copyright © 1999 Warmair.com, Inc.
Back to Main Page
Email this page to a friend
|