Hi All,
I'm looking for a bit of on advice. My house (1920's bungalow) is notoriously cold and had condensation issues. I've replace the floors due to wood worm(suspended floor, strip foundation) and insulated with rock wool as I went - this doesn't seem to have made a huge difference to getting the house warm.
My next port of call was to improve the insulation in the loft as the neighbours house attached to mine, who recently had spray insulation installed, would have a frosty roof much longer than mine on cold mornings. (see attached picture).
However when I went to measure how much insulation I needed I discovered that there was already 300mm of fresh insulation installed (I've only been in a year so always finding surprises). I did discover that the attic is unvented and identified signs of condensation wood but will that render the insulation ineffective? The insulation did appear dry and not damp. I will be getting vents installed.
At present, we've had a cold spell (sub zero) for over a week and its been very difficult to heat the house above 18C. Worse is heat seems to leave rooms very quickly and having redone them, they aren't overly drafty.
The loft has been partially converted, and insulated between the plasterboard and the roof. You can see on the picture that the top half of the roof is still frost and the melt line start half way down. Its typical for top half to still be frosty and the whole bottom of the roof to be melted.
Can anyone shed some light on this?
I'm looking for a bit of on advice. My house (1920's bungalow) is notoriously cold and had condensation issues. I've replace the floors due to wood worm(suspended floor, strip foundation) and insulated with rock wool as I went - this doesn't seem to have made a huge difference to getting the house warm.
My next port of call was to improve the insulation in the loft as the neighbours house attached to mine, who recently had spray insulation installed, would have a frosty roof much longer than mine on cold mornings. (see attached picture).
However when I went to measure how much insulation I needed I discovered that there was already 300mm of fresh insulation installed (I've only been in a year so always finding surprises). I did discover that the attic is unvented and identified signs of condensation wood but will that render the insulation ineffective? The insulation did appear dry and not damp. I will be getting vents installed.
At present, we've had a cold spell (sub zero) for over a week and its been very difficult to heat the house above 18C. Worse is heat seems to leave rooms very quickly and having redone them, they aren't overly drafty.
The loft has been partially converted, and insulated between the plasterboard and the roof. You can see on the picture that the top half of the roof is still frost and the melt line start half way down. Its typical for top half to still be frosty and the whole bottom of the roof to be melted.
Can anyone shed some light on this?