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| Greenbuilding Archive for February 2002 |
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| 458 messages, last added Tue Nov 26 17:26:37 2002 |
[Date Index][Thread Index]
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Hi David:
Thanks for the reply. Actually,
Corbond's recent literature -and their website (www.corbond.com) states that it will
achieve R-7, using polyurethane and no CFC's. How is polyurethane in the
environmental impact sense?
Jan
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, February 25, 2002 9:50
PM
Subject: Re: [GBlist] insulation
on 02/25/2002 4:32 PM, Jan Fillinger at janfillinger@jb.com
wrote:
I am
interested in a high efficiency blown-in insulation for a cathedral ceilings
without ventilation. I know a little about Icynene, which has an
installer in our area (Eugene, OR). I just recently heard about
Air-Krete (cementitious) and about Corbond (polyurethane). Does anyone
know more about these or any other products that would be environmentally
(more) benign and provide more than R-5 per inch?
Thanks,
Jan Fillinger
Jan,
Of the 3
options, only Corbond will give you above R-5 per inch. I believe that
it’s not actually a polyurethane, but a polyisocyanurate, but the chemists
among us will need to clarify that. I used to use it a lot, before I
knew better. It’s a great insulation, but the blowing agent depletes
stratospheric ozone. Although the current blowing agents have greatly
reduced ozone depletion potential, they’re still powerful greenhouse gasses.
I know of one company doing high-density spray foam with
zero-ozone-depletion gasses: Foamtech of Vermont. Perhaps there are
others on your coast. We still use sprayed poly foam in rare cases, when
our preferred system, dense-packed cellulose, isn’t feasible. If you use
Corbond , one consolation for the blowing agents is the amount of energy, and
therefore greenhouse gasses, you’ll be able to save over the life of the
insulation job.
Best wishes,
David
-- Holland &
Foley Building Design L.L.C. 232 Beech Hill Rd. Northport, Maine 04849
USA p: (207) 338-9869 f: (207) 338-9859 e:
hollandfoley@acadia.net
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