Vpete wrote:RD- it's different in my world but if you are digging down- seal the exterior and then spray foam the interior. once this directional boring is done my walls will be spray foamed. I was in another older house in my neighborhood last night and my buddy had his basement spray foamed and it was so dry and quiet it was weird. All the homes around here are between 80-100 years old.
We've had a lot of rain and most basements here get a little damp and his had nothing like that. I can't wait.
As for electrical it was absolutely necessary to upgrade. 100 amps is nowhere near enough anymore with home theatre, appliances of all types and lamps etc. I want power to burn and I can run back a conduit to my garage when it is done next year and have another sub-panel there.
Hey VPete, like I said before, we don't have money to burn on this reno, spray foam is great sure, why not, but for 3 times as much as R-20 batt insulation? We got our estimates on both systems, it's a no brainer, I'm gonna fur out 2x4 exterior walls to 2x6 dimension and insulate the exterior walls like every new house built in Vancouver these days, with R-20 batt insulation. 2 lb or 1/2 lb spray foam is only used for certain applications here in new homes. It ain't the frozen tundra in Vancouver, moisture is our problem, in fact some building envelope engineers ain't to hip to 2lb spray foam in flat ceilings anymore where it is outdoor above like a deck due to the fact that if there is ever a leak you will never see water come through the 2 lb spray foam to the drywall ceiling exposing leak. It will just pool and fester on top of spray foam eventually causing mold and moisture and rotting joists and deck sheathing. It is too water tight. There is still a lot of argument here amongst the independent building envelope engineers regarding spray foam, a lot of different opinions regarding how to make a home breathe better, it's kind of funny really. I can't tell you how many different opinions I got on how to properly vent a crawl space on a recent reno I did recently. Even the building inspector pretty much said, "uh, not sure really, you can do it this way, or this way, that way or that way, not sure which one works better".
Anyhow spray foam has it's good points but I have seen the stuff cause some problems, ie creating condensation/moisture problems in spray foamed roofs around potlights in hand cut rafter roof systems, and this roof was well vented with purlins/sleepers. It ain't the end all be all, doesn't breath all that well I imagine. 2 lb spray foam is a little too airtight, watertight, expensive and is unnecessary or a bit overkill for exterior 2x6 exterior walls. You hardly see any new homes spray foam the entire 2x6 exterior walls above grade, it's costly and unecessary. It's mostly all R-20 batt insulation.
Hey, if you have the $5,000 you can lend me to upgrade our service, that would be nice. We are maxed out on our budget. Plus, it's not a problem to upgrade down the road when we have the money. It is something we plan on doing eventually, it can all be done from outside the house. We have had many discussions with this over my electrical contractor and electrical inspector, 'we have adequate service' at the momment to get us through'. We ain't the type of people who have major entertainment systems in every room of the house like the Blob Mackenzie clan up there in Heritage Mountain.
"I just want to say one word to you. Just one word. Are you listening? - Plastics." - The Graduate