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Most
Americans do not visit
their attics regularly. For many years building codes have required high levels
of attic insulation, making attics less-than-hospitable places. People usually
go into their attics for one of two reasons: animal intruders, such as bats or
squirrels, or water leaking through the top floor ceiling. This guide deals with
water entry, such as roof leaks, ice dams, and attic condensation. Consult your
local pest control expert to rid the attic of creatures. What to Do If Water Comes Through Your CeilingFind out where
the leak is in your ceiling by measuring its location from the nearest outside
walls. Then, go into the attic through the attic hatch. It is often hidden in
the ceiling of a closet or in the wall of an attached garage. If it is in a
closet, move the clothes out of the closet so loose insulation won't stick to
them. Take a good flashlight and a tape measure. When walking in
the attic in older houses, step only on the wooden joists that cover the floor.
The joists are usually spaced every 16 inches. They are often hidden under a
pile of insulation. If you step off the joists, you will probably put your foot
through the plaster or drywall ceiling below. Many houses, especially in warmer
climates, have some type of floorboard over the joists. This makes walking
easier but can make air sealing and insulating more complicated. Most houses
built since the 1970s do not have attic rafters and joists, but trusses -
usually at 24 inch centres - with the ceiling below attached to the lower
chords. Walking in trussed attics is trickier than walking in older attics. One further
caution: if you find a significant amount of animal droppings from bats or
birds, do not disturb them. They can grow molds that can cause several
illnesses. To clean up droppings, you need good respiratory protection (masks)
and clothing that can be bleached or discarded. Find the water
leak. Use the tape measure to roughly locate where the Trace the water
to its source. Look for leaks in the roof, especially around chimneys, plumbing
vents, and attic vents - anything that penetrates the roof sheathing. Quite
often the roof flashing is defective and needs replacement. If the sheathing
(either boards, plywood, or composite board) along the lower edge of the roof is
soaked and you can see a corresponding accumulation of ice on top of the roof,
ice damming is occurring. This means that water is backing up under the
shingles. Shingles are designed only to shed water running down, not up. Ice
damming is covered at the end of this guide. Your inspection
may find that leakage is not the problem: the whole attic or part of it may be
dripping with condensation or covered with frost. Attic
condensation and ice damming are related. Both can be caused by warm, moist air
leaving the house and entering the attic. Attics will be in good shape if there
are no holes, air leaks, or bypasses from the house to the attic and there is
sufficient insulation to keep house heat from escaping. If you can ensure good
air sealing and insulation, the attic will remain cool and dry, as if it were
outside. For example, it is rare to see moisture problems or ice damming on the
roof of a detached garage or unheated barn. What To Do About a Wet AtticThere are many
signs that an attic is wet. Prolonged wetness will rot out the roof sheathing.
Often this is first noticed when re-shingling. If you have ceiling leaks only in
the spring, it may be that ice has been forming on the sheathing all winter and
it suddenly melts when a warm spell arrives. You may see water stains or
evidence of mold on the sheathing, rafters, or trusses when you are inspecting
the attic. You may find the insulation has been packed down or stained by water
or ice. The smell of a moldy attic will enter the house under certain weather
conditions, usually in summer. The usual
response is to increase attic ventilation. This is the wrong approach. In some
cases, adding ventilation will actually pull more moist house air up into the
attic and make the problem worse. The best way to fix a wet attic is to stop air
movement, or leaks, from the house. Once this is done, the existing
ventilation is usually more than enough to keep the attic dry. It is important
to stop air
leaks because a heated house is much like a chimney. Both a house and
chimney are containers of warm air surrounded by cold air. Both tend to draw air
in at the bottom and expel it at the top. All winter, a heated house is trying
to push air through the top floor ceiling into the attic. Block up those air
leaks and keep the warmth in the house to save both energy costs and damage to
your attic. Air leaks are
usually found at penetrations or discontinuities. Safety regulations prevent
sealing of many types of pot lights in top floor ceilings. House air is dumped
into the attic through them. Choose sealed pot lights or avoid them on the top
floor. Bathroom fans
need to be ducted outside. Make sure that they are properly vented. If the ducts
are located in the attic, ensure that there are solid metal rather than flex
duct, insulated and sloped to the outside. Do not wrap the insulation in plastic
as this will trap moisture.Taping the duct joints, or sealing them with mastic,
is helpful for controlling leakage. Plumbing stacks
and chimneys are often sources of air leakage. Seal these where they pass
through the attic floor. For metal chimneys inside a chase or for old masonry
chimneys, you may need help from an expert to ensure proper sealing and
avoidance of fire hazards. Seal holes made for electrical wiring and cable
installations. There will be
little air leakage in the middle of sheet of drywall or in the middle of an
unbroken plaster ceiling.There may be many air leaks where partition or bearing
walls meet the ceiling or around the perimeter of the house where the attic
floor (or top floor ceiling) meets the outside walls. All
discontinuities should be inspected and sealed if necessary. Look for
bypasses.They are major air passages from any floor into the attic. Dropped
ceilings in the room below will often conceal a direct connection to the attic.
Concrete block party walls between row houses often move house air into the
attic. There are
several ways to check for these large and unexpected leaks. The blower door
tester can pressurize the house with a big fan and amplify the leakage.
Searching the attic at night for lights from below can be helpful. Scanning batt
insulation for dirty areas which have been filtering the air from below is also
useful, although such straining seems to occur less frequently with blown
insulation. Sometimes the holes are so big that you can see into the house
below. Some houses have
heating or air conditioning ducts or equipment in the attic.These can be the
major source of air leakage and heat loss in the attic. Good information on how
to seal and insulate these devices has been published in Home Energy Magazine,
available in some libraries. Leaks can be
sealed with caulking, expanding foam, plastic, or other methods. There are a
number of publications giving details on sealing methods, including Keeping the
Heat In from Natural Resources Canada 1 800 387-2000 in In an older
house, the most thorough way to air seal an attic floor is to clear away
insulation from each joist bay and seal all discontinuities. If the attic joists
are covered with floor boards, a thorough job includes lifting them to expose
the ceiling below. Do this for the entire attic except for areas underlain by
unbroken ceilings in a large room. It sounds difficult, but for most attics it
should not take more than a day for a two-person crew. Wear good dust masks. Do
the work in the fall when the attic is not too hot. Doing only obvious
discontinuities without lifting all the insulation can be effective but may
result in missing some air leakage paths. While you are up
there, why not put some more insulation down? Make sure that you have at least
300 mm (10 in.) of loose insulation or batts.There are only minor differences in
the insulating quality of fiberglass, rock wool and cellulose.They all work well
in attics. Where to look for leaks
Attic VentingIf you have
properly sealed the attic you should not need more attic ventilation. Attic
ventilation is overrated. In winter, the cold outside air cannot hold much
humidity or carry moisture away from the attic. In summer, attic temperatures
are more affected by the sun and shingle colour than by the amount of
ventilation. Recent research
shows that identical attics, with one unvented and the other vented to code,
have much the same humidity and temperature. Attic computer models show that
attics in damp coastal climates may actually be drier with less ventilation. Building codes
require attic ventilation. Ventilation may make a difference in a borderline
situation. Attic ventilation is driven primarily by wind. To ensure thorough
venting, have openings at the soffits and then higher on the roof at the ridge,
gable end, or high on the roof surface. The requirement for attic vent sizing is
nominally 1:300 (or one square foot of vent size for every 300 square feet of
attic floor area). If you wish to improve your attic venting, ensure that it is
as well distributed as possible. Do not worry about meeting the 1:300
requirement exactly. Vents should be screened to keep out animals and insects.
If you are using soffit vents, make sure that there is a space between the roof
sheathing and the insulation for the ventilation air to pass. Commercially
available plastic or card board forms can be used, or the extruded polystyrene
board option described in the ice damming section. Ice DammingIce dams are the
large mass of ice that collects on the lower edge of the roof or in the gutters.
As more melting snow (or rain) runs down the roof, it meets this mass of ice and
backs up, sometimes under the shingles and into the attic or the house. Ice damming
usually occurs with a significant depth of snow on the roof. If the attic
temperature is above freezing, it warms the roof sheathing which melts the snow
lying on the shingles. This water runs down the roof until it meets the roof
overhang, which is not warmed by the attic and will be at the temperature of the
surrounding air. If the air and the overhang are below freezing, then the water
will freeze on the roof surface and start the ice dam.
Click on image for a larger version An attic with no
insulation will generally not have a problem with ice dams. The heat coming
through the attic will tend to melt snow off as it lands and prevent much
accumulation. A well-sealed and insulated attic will generally not have ice
dams. Like the example of a detached garage, this generally results in a cool
roof and no great amount of melting. Ice dams are more frequent if the roof is
complicated by many valleys and dormers or there is a large roof overhang. Ice dams will
first show up where there is inadequate insulation or major air leaks. One way
to find these locations is to look at the roof with the first heavy frost in
fall or light snow. Watch where the snow melts off first and find out what is
under that spot on the roof. One common sight in such conditions is a horizontal
melt line across the roof of a storey-and-a-half house, where the short kneewall
meets the ceiling. Other places would be beneath a roof-ducted exhaust fan or
over a leaky attic access hatch. The basic relief for ice damming is to seal all
attic air leaks and insulate thoroughly, the same solution as for attic
condensation. Many attics,
including those under low-sloped roofs, do not have enough space for adequate
insulation at the edge of the attic floor. If soffit insulation requires a
baffle to keep a ventilation opening against the sheathing, often there will be
only 100 mm (4 inches) of space for insulation. This will tend to melt the snow
off just above the over hang and promote ice damming. Try to put the best
insulation possible at that edge to reduce heat loss. Blown foam is ideal as it
air seals as well as insulates. Cut pieces of
extruded polystyrene will help as well. Mount a piece of extruded polystyrene 25
mm (1 inch) from the sheathing to maintain the ventilation air space and fill
between this board and the attic floor with good insulation. Ice dams caused
by cathedral ceilings are more difficult. The same principles apply to
preventing ice dams — stopping house air leaks, good insulation, perhaps
ventilation — but cathedral ceilings are harder to get to. If you have ice dam
problems with cathedral ceilings, you can fix the problem when re-roofing.
Remove the sheathing, seal and fill the cavities with insulation, and replace
the roofing material. A well-sealed roof will not need ventilation. If you are
uncertain whether the sealing can be done effectively, leave a ventilation
channel under the sheathing from the soffit to the peak. Sometimes insulation
can be added to the ceiling inside, although this approach will not catch the
air leakage. An extensive and
expensive ice dam solution is to make the roof impermeable by using a
self-sealing membrane under the shingles. Building codes require such membranes
on the lower part of the roof in new houses. Note that these membranes do not
stop ice dams, they just prevent the water from leaking through the roof
sheathing. Ice damming can still create the unsightly ice build-up and possible
damage to shingles and gutters, but you may be spared the leakage into the
house. Do all these ice
damming solutions sound like too much work? There are many quicker solutions
that are popular, but in the end have drawbacks. You can attach electric cables
which will melt channels in the ice, sometimes alleviating a problem. Cables use
a significant amount of electrical energy as well as being an eyesore on most
roofs. Removing gutters
will keep them from becoming ice traps, but gutters are valuable: they keep roof
water away from your basement. Attacking ice dams every winter with an axe or
ice pick is a good way to shorten shingle life — and a good opportunity to
fall off a ladder. At least one person has had success with filling nylon
stockings with salt and laying them in the gutter. Some corrosion and
environmental damage may result. For some older
houses with complicated roofs, it may be impossible to completely eliminate ice
dams without resorting to some of the methods above. However, for most houses,
the preferred solution is to keep house heat out of the attic, by air sealing
and insulating, and avoid weaker alternatives. Spend the time to fix it properly
and you will not have to worry about it again while you live in that house. |
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