Alexis
 New Member
 Posts:67
 |
| 22 Oct 2013 01:54 PM |
|
Hello, do you think it's a good idea to leave the basement foundation wall uninsulated for one year. I plan to insulate from the inside, and I'm affraid that by covering right now the foundation with insulation board I will not be able to repair small crack that appear in the foundation.
Of course, I know I will pay more heating this winter for the ininsulated foundation, but it's almost 7' deep so it shouldn't be THAT bad.
It's my experience that a lot of new concrete foundation cracks initially because of shrinkage or initial settling... what do you think of this idea?
Alexis |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Dana1
 Senior Member
 Posts:6991
 |
| 22 Oct 2013 02:09 PM |
|
Leaving it uninsulated on a higher-R building would increase the design condition heat load by quite a bit, and a heating system designed for the uninsulated peak could be grossly oversized (at a cost in efficiency & comfort) for the "after" picture. But it all depends... If you go uninsulated, size the mechanicals for the post-insulated loads, and use auxilliary heat to stay warm during the coldest bits. |
|
|
|
|
jonr
 Senior Member
 Posts:5341
 |
| 22 Oct 2013 03:48 PM |
|
I'm curious, is there really a need to repair small cracks in a concrete wall? |
|
|
|
|
Bob I
 Veteran Member
 Posts:1435
 |
| 22 Oct 2013 03:56 PM |
|
no reason that I know, except if there is water coming through the cracks, which rarely happens with good drains and a good tar coat on the exterior. I'd insulate it immediately. |
|
| Bob Irving<br>RH Irving Homebuilders<br>Certified Passive House Consultant |
|
|
Eric Anderson
 Basic Member
 Posts:441

 |
| 22 Oct 2013 04:06 PM |
|
No reason to delay insulating the walls. If you have our drainage and waterproofing right it is a non issue. If you don't, on year is not going to help.
Cheers,
Eric |
|
| Think Energy CT, LLC Comprehensive Home Performance Energy Auditing |
|
|