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Spray foam the interior of a exterior brick wall?

5K views 13 replies 4 participants last post by  Windows on Wash 
#1 · (Edited)
I have,a 1977 single story all brick house im south texas I need to strip to the studs so I can rewire and replumb. Im new to the idea of spray foam but want to get it installed. the house has a brick pocket with weep holes, soffet and ridgecap. I wanted to add flooring to the attic for storage and have a surface to spray foam the ceiling below. If there is no vapor barrier in the wall do I spray the brick? Or put xps im each stud bay then foam that? Also I wanted to the leave the soffet and ridge cap open for ventalation, but seal the walls and ceiling of the house. Will this cause any issues?
 
#3 ·
Demo will start at the end of october. But I couldn t wait so I removed a non working receptical and box. Through the box hole i can see brick and a weep hole. So either the gypson board rotted away or there was never a vapor barrier. Not even tar paper. So when the time comes do I seal the the far side of the wall with foam board and spray 3 inches of 3lbs closed cell foam im the stud bay. Leaving the brickpocket intact.

Does anyone have a picture of how this should look.
 
#5 ·
Another thing you may want to consider is to insulate the bottom of the roof instead of the top of the ceiling. This is called "Hot Deck" and has been proven to be a very effective method that doesn't affect the life of shingles. One big advantage is that it makes future modifications much easier. If you do that either not have to worry about ventilation of the attic area as it becomes part of the conditioned space.
 
#6 ·
"If there is no vapor barrier in the wall do I spray the brick?"---- no, don't spray directly on the brick, as WoW said. Can you work some fanfold on the studs (to protect them from solar-driven moisture on the sunny-side), yet still leave an air channel for the brick? Then add the cavity XPS, canned foamed at all edges= air-tight. ADA the drywall.

Expect 10% less shingle life with a closed roof. http://www.buildingscience.com/documents/digests/bsd-102-understanding-attic-ventilation/#Cash_2005
If HVAC and ducts are in the attic, closed roof is good....if not, leave it vented.

Gary
 
#8 ·
Very unlikely the sealed attic will starve the unit for combustion air but if you are concerned, test the draft on it.

A closed cell can foam is a good idea. I like the window and door specific stuff as it lays down a more representative bead and does not have any pull back issues.
 
#14 ·
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