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Posted By: djhWith MVHR running you won't need to worry about humidity building up in the house.
The MVHR ducts are full of air at room temperature, so ideally they want to be within the thermal envelope. That means putting them on top of the ceiling and then at least 300 mm of insulation above them as Nick mentions. As he also says, building a large insulated box to put the MVHR unit in will be sensible. Don't forget to think about changing the filters regularly. The intake and exhaust ducts can be run without any extra insulation, if they are themselves insulated ducts.
The electric cables want to be outside the insulation (above or below), or increased in size to allow for derating. Perhaps easiest is in conduits on top of the insulation.
If the loft is 'cold' (i.e. ventilated to the outside) then you'll want a membrane on top of the insulation to keep the draught off it. You may want another membrane below it as part of your airtightness.
Posted By: Nick ParsonsHi Oliviaaa99,
Thanks for starting a new thread. It makes your needs much clearer.
One worry - reference to 80mm joists and insulating between them. (Or maybe I have misunderstood). You are required by the Building Regs to achieve a U value of 0.16W/m2K (which is reckoned to be about 270mm of 'typical' 'fluff' insulation with a lambda value (thermal conductivity) of around 0.044W/mK (note that's W/mK, not W/m2K, if you are not familiar with the units). I'd say you want 300 - 400mm (although of course that reduces as you reach the eaves - half the reason for having more where you can. Note also that your proposal re the cables will leave them 'tucked up warm' in insulation if you are using enough. That's OK if you 'up-size' your cables to allow for the heat they will be prevented from losing. Either that or you have to down-size the breakers so the cables cannot get over-warm.
You are planning a heat exchange in a cold space. I don't know how thick is the insulation (ask for the insulation value) on the insulated ducting, but pre-insulated solar water heating pipe I have seen before had a disappointingly small thickness.
If the MVHR unit is going to be in the loft void I would advise you (as I have advised many others) to build an 'MVHR 'shed' - an insulated 'building-ette' for the unit.
Posted By: GreenPaddyA few comments, thoughts:
- you need as much insulation above the ducts as you would have for your best external wall/roof/floor, as all the warm air of the house flows in these ducts, and can quickly lose heat, dropping cold air into rooms, or failing to warm the fresh air intake. So one layer of loft roll over it, for example, won't do it.
- you mention the ceiling joists are 80mm deep. That sounds very thin, even if they're fink trusses.
- are you hoping to improve the air tightness of the ceiling? If it's a ventilated attic, ie. cold air above the flooring, used for storage of the Christmas tree, then I would not fit a VCL. Use a breathable airtightness membrane, and let the humidity from the house pass into the attic (appreciate the absolute humidity will probably be reduced by virtue of the MVHR).
- was there any sort of air tighness membrane fitted in the walls, when the initial work was done. Plaster skim? What about services penetrations in the walls? Sockets, light switches, water pipes, drains from sinks. Only asking from the viewpoint of walls being an air passage up the the attic (are they plasterboard, or plaster directly on blockwork.
- are you able to access the attic joists at the eaves perimeter, as the void above the plasterbrd ceiling is where the air will tend to escape, once a membrane is laid over the 95% of the middle floor area?
. Perhaps there are lots of joist hangers to support them? I don't recall seeing 80mm ceiling joists in 40 years on sites (I started VERY young).
Posted By: GreenPaddy4. Fit the ducts. Focus on how you seal around the penetrations of cables and ducts (and joist hangers - vertical timbers).Rissan tape is very useful for sealing round random objects. Just cut short lengths (a few inches) and stick lots of them around whatever the penetration is. Be sure to use the back of a knife handle or something to press the tape in place.
I'm still concerned about the 80mm deep joists. They were sized to carry the plasterboard ceiling, and an occasional tradesman.If you need to strengthen the joists anywhere, you can always 'sister' new stronger (deeper?) lengths of timber alongside the existing joists.
Posted By: djhOne other consideration to add to the list - rodents. Design whatever you end up with to be resistant to rodents. Maybe mice, or in our last house's loft we had squirrels for a while!
What type of ducting are you planning to use? Plug-together semi-rigid radial ducting is very easy to use and is unlikely to need access afterwards.
I agree the joists look like 80 mm. Just be careful about putting point loads on them.

Posted By: GreenPaddyHere's how I'd design this, if I were doing this for a client (which I do, it's my job)...
The objective is...seal the awkward perimeters, seal the membrane, make ceiling air tight, maintain ventilation between rafters at the eaves, keep it fairly simple.
The attached detail (hopefully) shows the following process;
1. fit 80mm PIR boards onto the plasterboard ceiling, between the joists. Don't need to be too accurate with the cuts, indeed leave 5-10mm gapsall around, for foam filling. Use what's often called 'board adhesive' which is like expanding foam, but it doesn't expand much but glues really well. Stick this PIR board to the plaster board too (set something ontop of the board for 30 mins till it sets, so the foam doesn't push the board up). Probably about 400mm depth, from eaves inwards, but 300mm might be adequate. Choose a dimension as a multiple from 1200mm which is the full board width.
2. Remove insulation from the voids where power cbles are run. I wouldn't worry about the lighting cables, as they are likely well oversized due to the use of LED lights at 5W rather than 60W bulbs.
3. Lay the airtight membrane over the joists, and stick it to the PIR board perimeter. Lay the rolls of the membrane parallel to the joists, and start the next run ontop of a joist. Fix a rip of plywood over that joint onto the joist, so the membrane is clamped mechanically. I'd use Protect BarriAir as the membrane, as it is one of the better priced air tight membranes (£1.50/m2). It is also a VCL, but that's not particularly important, as the MVHR will mitigate humidity issues, assuming it is opperated correctly.
4. Fit the ducts. Focus on how you seal around the penetrations of cables and ducts (and joist hangers - vertical timbers).
5. Fit PIR boards to the rafters, tight down onto the initial horiz PIR boards, clamping the membrane again. Adhesive foam that butt joint. Use screws with a large washer to screw the board into the rafters. I make the washers from offcuts of plywood, say 50mm x 50mm. Drill the holes in the ply first, then cut the plywood squares - saves sore fingers from holding little plywood squares whilst trying to drill. These are likely 600mm wide, to cover from eaves up the rafters to above the deck height. 500mm might be enough, but then you're wasting 100mm rip and more cuts.
6. Fit 3 layers of wool. Happens to be my choice to use 3 layers at 140/150, but you could do 2 at 200mm. What ever, just make sure there is plenty over the ducts, and that you run the rolls perpendicular to the one below. 3 layers means better gap minimising as have 3 passes.
7. I would fit the deck as I roll out the insulation, to minimise treading on the wool. I'm still concerned about the 80mm deep joists. They were sized to carry the plasterboard ceiling, and an occasional tradesman. The chipboard deck alone will be quite a load, plus a person or two, plus all the really valuable junk we all store in attics, before taking it to the skip 20 years laterhttps:///newforum/extensions/Vanillacons/smilies/standard/bigsmile.gif" alt="
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" >. Perhaps there are lots of joist hangers to support them? I don't recall seeing 80mm ceiling joists in 40 years on sites (I started VERY young).
Posted By: philedgeMy opinion is you'd have to be anally meticulous to get any membrane sealed 100% around the perimeter of the roof. I'm not saying it's impossible but very challenging to do a good job.
Even the smallest unsealed section will allow air to flow from the unsealed bit and under the membrane to any part of the ceiling below. To get it sealed around the ends of ceiling joists and hip beams will take so much time. If you fix to the wall plate and there's any gaps under the wall plate that the rafters sit on there'll just be a constant draught under the membrane through any cracks or gaps in the ceiling.
As its a bungalow with easier access and if you've got cavity walls, my view would be you'd get better results stripping off the lower perimeter of the roof covering to allow you to fully seal the edge of the ceiling and extend the loft insulation to reach the cavity insulation so you've got the previously inaccessible perimeter fully insulated. Straight forward to strip the roof from an alloy tower if it's a tiled roof.....a slate roof is a bit more involved!
When you come to insulate the loft fill between the ceiling joists so the first layer is levelish with the top of the joists. The next layer gets laid so it rests on the first layer AND the top of the ceiling joists. If you don't get the first layer level with the joists then the second layer will have lots of tunnels under it
Posted By: GreenPaddywould you have a closer/brighter photo of the eaves? I'm not clear why the air would not vent up between the rafters at the wall head? The photo you added earlier seems to show this, but it's tricky to see.
The reason I'm asking about this is that the edges at the ceiling to walls are very weak points thermally, and so you want to get insualation right out to the bricks if you can. I appreciate that the vent line may not be at the base of the rafters, but presumably it can be shepherded to the rafter gaps as it passes over the wall head, since the rafters pass over the wall head (or appear to).
If necessary, add 50mm timber battens over the underside face of the rafters, to deepen them, then do the angled PIR board, but I can't YET see why it would be necessary. A photo will no doubt reveal why it is.
The middle bit of the ceiling is easy, it's the edges that are tricky.
Not sure (from your sketch) if you're thinking of PIR boards over the whole ceiling in the 80mm joist void? That's not necessary with the wool depth above. The joist voids can either be empty with cables, or leave the old insulation. The PIR boards only fill the joist void around the perimeter for say 300mm. Maybe I'm mis-reading your sketch?
Not keen on the stepped insulation around the edge, for the reasons mentioned above.
Definitely do not want the membrane above the insulation, unless it's very breathable. You're also trying to seal a 3D box, which is much trickier than a single plane. Don't under estimate how difficult this will be, especially in a dusty attic. Granted it eliminates most of the duct penetrations, but there are solutions to make sealing those robust.
I would pay for a structural engineer to assess the ceiling joists, (spans versus load bearing walls below), and the load your planning to put up there. One approach can be to build the raised deck as suspended with horiz timbers that fix to the rafters and joist hangers like a new floor, with supports down onto the joists at load bearing wall head points, so at least some load is carried by the rafters and transmitted to the supporting walls. It will likely cost you £250 to get them to come out, but I'd say it's money well spent.
Posted By: Nick ParsonsGreenPaddy said: ''I don't recall seeing 80mm ceiling joists in 40 years on sites''
That's a pretty standard size for Victorian terraced houses in Yorkshire. Even ones built with rooms-in-the-roof! My chest of drawers used to lean forward to greet me when I came into the attic room at the other end! It is very common to see Victorian terrace attic rooms with a 'hump' in the middle where the joists dip either side of the central spine wall! (I'm saying it's common, not good!). It's also fairly common to see 65-80mm as the bottom chord of 1960s trusses.
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