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Rooftherm Roof Insulation Contractors
Dane Mill Business Centre
Broadhurst Lane
Congleton
Cheshire
CW12 1LA
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Tel: 0800 084 2887
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Rooftherm Contractors, roofing, polyurethane spray foam installers.
We work nationally UK, competitive pricing policy, will match or beat any competitive bona fide quote.
Telephone free: 0800 084 2887 |
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Mulit foil insulation, if the manufacturers claims are believed, looks an easy way to meet the tougher 2006 Building Regulations for building insulation. Like spray foam, it can be used for both new and retro fit. But is it so simple? We investigate below.
The 2006 Building regulations raised considerably the insulation values required in UK homes and buildings. Part L of the Building Regulations deals with the U values required to meet the standards. For example, the U value to meet a ceiling against rafter section is 0.2. This is difficult to achieve with conventional insulation products due to the need to top vent the top or cold side of the insulation material by a continuous 50 mm air gap vented to the outside to prevent condensation. The amount of space required to fit the insulation product has become critical which is why spray foam has become a big winner in recent years; nothing can pack as much insulation value in the smallest of depths as Rooftherm polyurethane spray foam with a lambda value of just circa 0.020 when new. Space and ventilation make a ceiling against rafter section extremely difficult to achieve the U value of 0.20 with conventional products so how does 1) Rooftherm Spray Foam and 2) Multi Foil insulation compare?
Rooftherm spray foam on its own can achieve U value of 0.20 with just 100 mm given a k value of 0.020. Not only that, but because Rooftherm is an air sealer it requires no top side or cold side ventilation as relatively warm (moist) air cannot permeate to the cold side and produce condensation. Obviously, due allowance in the real world must be made for cold bridging, typically the timber rafter section itself will drag the overall U value up so an increase in Rooftherm will be needed.
The manufacturers of multi foil have claimed in the past R values up to 5 which would provide a U value of 0.2. Again due allowance would have to be given for cold bridging and also care would be needed when installing to provide a an air tight seal by careful jointing. However, a major spanner has been thrown in the works as the Local Authority Building Control association has now declared that they will not accept multi foil as achieving anywhere near the U value of 0.20 as a stand alone insulation product. The April 2008 report that has been circulated to all Local Authority Building Control departments makes the position very clear, Building Control officers cannot now accept multi foil in its own right as meeting Building Regulations on U values.
Please feel free to download the LABC Technical Guidance on Multi-foil insulation report here.
This would appear to indicate that whatever the merits of multi foil it is no longer an acceptable method of insulating a property on its own to meet Building Regulations U values. It would further appear from one British Board of Agrement certificate that the U value of multi foil is of the order 0.54 which is well outside Building Regulations where U values now start at 0.25 and below. So even a British Board of Agrement certificate will not help as this merely confirms the inadequacy of the product in meeting U values down to 0.20.
Some mulit foil manufacturers have responded that the method of testing for U values (the hot box) does not adequately test how multi foil performs in the real world but it is interesting that the National Physics Laboratory who are UKAS audited and who have tested multi foil are sticking with the scientific evaluation made (whilst leaving the door open for multi foil manufacturers to come up with an accepted scientific test methodology), multi foil as tested in the laboratory does not meet manufacturers claims. The bottom line is simply that if you wish to meet Building Regulations for U values you cannot achieve them in the eyes of LABC and the National Physics Laboratory by using multi foil insulation. Another reason to use tried and tested polyurethane spray foam where the results have already been evaluated and accepted. |
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Foams are mainly used as cushioning material in furniture, bedding, and transportation. They are normally produced by a mixture of toluene diisocyanide (TDI) and polyether polyols. Rigid foams find application as insulation material in refrigeration and construction. They are formed by reaction of mostly methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI) with an aromatic polyester polyol. The fluorocarbons, the heavily criticized foam-blowing agents, have been substituted in industrialized nations by less harmful substances in accordance with the 1989 Montreal Protocol of the United Nations Environmental Program. Foams are produced during the reaction of the liquid components and shaped by extrusion or injection under heat or at room temperature. The exact formulation is adjusted according to the processes. Polyurethane (PUR) components are delivered in a standardized premixed form, a machine-ready system. However, systems have to be designed for specific applications and the machinery used by the customers. In most cases the best way of production has to be established in an experimental phase on the customer’s production site. The assistance of the supplier’s technical staff is often necessary because the specific production situation—retention times of the liquids in the machines, tubes, and mixing equipment—cannot be easily simulated in the laboratory. As the polyurethanes are quite reactive, the process kinetics depend on the given chemical and physical parameters, and the industrial process needs to be designed according to situation. A profound knowledge of the process technology is absolutely necessary for the sales team. Successful marketing of polyurethanes needs a technically oriented team with a high degree of practical experience; a compilation of case studies is an important marketing asset.
Companies which integrate all PUR components (diisocanates, polyols, and propylene oxides) have an advantage not only in price but also in the increased possibility of modifying the components according to the customer’s needs. A strongly integrated company in the PUR business is Bayer, supplying about a quarter of the world demand in MDI and TDI. |
| Maximum U-Values (W/m2K) | 2002 | Foam depth mm | 2007 | Foam depth mm | | Room in roof new build | 0.2 | 115 | 0.16 | 130 | | Room in roof conversion | 0.3 | 75 | 0.25 | 100 | | Pitched roof | 0.16 | 85* | 0.16 | 85* | | Flat roof | 0.25 | 85 | 0.16 | 135 | | Walls | 0.35 | 60 | 0.25 | 75 | | Floors | 0.25 | 50 | 0.22 | 60 | | Windows | 2 | n.a. | 1.8 | n.a. | | Rooflights | 2 | n.a. | 1.8 | n.a. | *assumes mineral wool or similar material is laid at loft ceiling height to a depth of 100 mm. |
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Cut the cost not the comfort of running your home. Here are some simple ways to check and help cut your home energy bills this winter either for little or at no cost to your wallet. |
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As predicted by Rooftherm in December 2005 ( http://www.rooftherm.co.uk/blog/?p=9), British energy consumers in February 2006 are now feeling the full brunt of the shenanigans going on in the wholesale energy market, particularly for gas, with gas prices up a whopping 22%. Producers are known to be stock piling; there is no actual shortage of gas on the world market. Distributors have acted in unison and all have put prices together in one large cartel price movement, blaming producers in the process for their actions. |
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At Rooftherm we often get new enquiries where there is confusion about what roof insulation actually is. It is often confused with laying insulation in between and across the ceiling joists in a house. We would more generally term this loft insulation. Roof insulation is insulation running with the pitch of the roof and in between the roof rafters. |
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In doing my research for this article I read quite a number of books and web site articles. It’s seems that any web site even remotely connected to insulation wants to pass itself off as an “expert” in its field. Some of the better articles I read on insulation talk about investment and payback. Basically the idea is what you spend on installing insulation is your “investment” and the savings made by spending less on heating you home is your “return”. There comes a point in the future when the savings you make become equal or greater than the cost of having insulation installed, this is the “time to payback” and 2 to 5 years is often postulated. Payback is quicker in times of rapid inflation in fuel bills. With fuel bills expected to rise between 10 to 25% in 2006/7 alone the payback time is getting shorter. However, is financial payback the reason why we install insulation? |
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A well insulated house saves you money by reducing your home energy consumption. It will cost far less to heat your home whether you use oil, gas, coal or electrical heating systems simply because less heat energy is lost when the home is well insulated. Heat energy is lost through conduction, drafts, radiation and convection. Insulation helps prevent these sources of heat loss. Insulation helps keep expensively produced warm air within the rooms of your home and minimises your use of energy. |
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We get each week a number of enquiries for roof insulation DIY systems. Of course the motivating factor is to save money and perhaps to get the job done quickly rather than wait 6 to 8 weeks before a professional spray foam polyurethane company could install the roof insulation due to order book workload particularly in winter months. We fully appreciate these motivations which is why our pricing policy is ultra competitive and why we try to accommodate within a customer’s installation time frame. If you have decided to go the DIY foam route then go to at least reputable distributors such as DIY Spray Foam or Iso-Spray DIY Polyurethane Spray Foam Shop who maintain an online shop and can provide backup and customer support for all DIY spray foam applications. |
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