Reed hedges dec 10 10 at 20 06.
Should you insulate your roof rafters.
Place the plastic sheeting on top of the rolled insulation.
Polyurethane or polystyrene spray foams can provide thorough coverage to roof rafters and attic walls in much less time than is needed for other materials.
You can add insulation to the floor.
Install ventilation baffles into the space between the rafters before you install the insulation usually by stapling into place.
You can also add rigid foam insulation under the rafters which adds r value and eliminates thermal bridging through wood rafters.
If your attic is often used or perhaps you plan to convert it in the future you will need to insulate the inner surfaces of the roof.
Unlike solid insulation products that require careful measurement cutting and fitting spray foam can cover even the most uneven surface instantly.
If your attic is going to be converted into livable space then you will need to insulate the roof rafters.
The technically correct approach depends on a number of factors.
The airflow from the soffits to the ridge vent keeps the roof cool and prevents ice dams and the material will block that flow.
Insulating between rafters will do no good because the attic should be ventilated and the rafter insulation would be between two unheated spaces.
If the plastic sheeting is in pieces overlap the pieces by 8 inches and staple it in place directly to the roof rafters and the wall.
Covering up the soffit vents with loose fill or batts which can happen if you stuff insulation along the eaves is a huge no no.
If you have vents in the walls of the attic or in the roof ridge then the insulation can go all the way to the roof.
The current trend is for a warm roof where insulation is installed between the rafters thereby keeping the roof timbers warm.
The idea is to allow some air to circulate through some part of the attic under the roof but outside the insulation to prevent moisture build up.
For the same reason insulation shouldn t touch the roof s underside.
The first decision is whether to insulate a pitched roof at ceiling or rafter level.
Attic moisture problems are often the result of heated air from the living space rising up into the attic which is not heated.
Consider using high density r 30 batts which are as thick as r 25 batts but fit into 2x10 framing.
Whether or not there is an inner roof lining and the total thickness of the roof structure.
If there is a floor you will need to remove it to properly insulate the roof rafters.