Ok, quick question.
I have a slate roof. The attic has been converted and the walls follow the angle of the roof, meaning there is a 9-10 inch gap between the wall and the wood of the roof. The roofline has eaves on this side.
The image above should hopefully help.
Access is only as far as I can stick my arm down the gap.
My question is, can I put insulation down the gap so that the internal attic room stays warmer? The roof is unfelted so there's a hell of gale blows through the attic (which is a good thing I know).
My concern is that because it is a very old roof, inevitably some water will get in but if I block that bit all up with insulation it won't be able to dry out due to lack of airflow, increasing the risk of rot.
Is that assumption correct? Is so, is there anything I can do to improve this situation?
I have a slate roof. The attic has been converted and the walls follow the angle of the roof, meaning there is a 9-10 inch gap between the wall and the wood of the roof. The roofline has eaves on this side.
The image above should hopefully help.
Access is only as far as I can stick my arm down the gap.
My question is, can I put insulation down the gap so that the internal attic room stays warmer? The roof is unfelted so there's a hell of gale blows through the attic (which is a good thing I know).
My concern is that because it is a very old roof, inevitably some water will get in but if I block that bit all up with insulation it won't be able to dry out due to lack of airflow, increasing the risk of rot.
Is that assumption correct? Is so, is there anything I can do to improve this situation?