jabuzzard,
I'm looking into this again and your idea appeals to me - primarily for not having the extra weight of wood and getting better insulation for my additional 100mm depth. However I have a few questions:
1) I only have limited experience of insulation boards. Is there any one particular type that you would recommend for this application or are they all much the same?
They are I believe all pretty much the same. I purchased them from
Wickes because they would also deliver the T&G loft panels at the same time as well and some extra fibreglass rolls for the areas not boarded out.
2) I presume since you have done this the answer would be no or 'not much', but doesn't the insulation board get 'dented' where it lies over the joists and has weight put on the floorboards?
I have boarded three lofts in my time. My sisters flat and my house using extra timber to jack the floor level up. My sister then moved to a house and asked if I would board out her new house and fix the loft insulation, as it was only as deep as the joists and missing in places. I decided to go for the Celotex/Kingspan method as something of a punt for speed and minimizing the loss of height.
You need to be careful when installing it, always make sure you use a board to kneel on it, but I did not find it has dented significantly, and it still seems to be doing fine a year later.
3) Have you used 'standard' t&g loft boards on top of the insulation board? If so how have you fixed them down to prevent them coming apart when walking on them?
Yes I used standard T&G loft boards on top of the insulation board. They are fitted tight between the gable ends of the house and two thicker joists that ran the length of the house, so it cannot in effect "move" I is however screwed to the 100mm timber I used to jack up around the loft hatch. You could if you want get 150mm screws and screw the loft boards to the joists through the insulation board around the edge if it is not butting up against something solid.
This is a picture of the job in progress.
I have just had a report from my brother who reckons that the plastic loft legs are good, so if you have the insulation already and have plenty of headroom, then that is reasonable solution. If you look at the picture of my sister's loft she does not have much headroom, and did not have any insulation to begin with so the celotex route turned out to be a no brainer.
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