Posted By pura vida on 09 Mar 2011 12:34 PM
awesome, thanks. definitely am seriously considering the rainscreening. since i plan on being in the house "forever" it will easily pay for itself and give me piece of mind. so r4/inch of cellulose is the figure to use? manufactures and installers have claimed 5 but i was wondering if this had been stretched some. either way this gives me right around the r30 value i was shooting for and still being able to stay with 2x6 construction. that is a relief, and is encouraging. any issue of using wet blown cellulose over closed cell foam? would consider just going with dry blown if i go with the closed cell but i just feel more confident that it won't settle over 30+ years with the wet stuff. maybe that is just me uninformed? i could essentially get to around the same r-value with just cellulose but i think the closed cell would be well worth the money for the additional air tightness.
R3.5-3.6would be closer for 2-2.5lb spray cellulose. In a 2x6 cavity with 1" of foam you have 4.5" left for cellulose. 4.5x3.5 gives R15.75 (call it R16).
Wet sprayed cellulose feels only slightly damp to the touch, but it's sticky enough to hang on just about anything- close-cell polyurethane included. The perm-rating of the spray foam is high enough at 1" that the cellulose will still have some drying capacity toward the exterior (even through sheathing and exterior XPS), but it'll be mostly drying toward the interior. With 2" of closed cell + OSB + XPS the total outward drying capacity will be under 0.5 perms, but the cold edge of the cellulose stays much warmer and drier in the first place.
Dense packed dry blown (3.5lbs density) would still be a non-sagging option in that stackup in your climate, but for sure an inch of ccSPF makes the air sealing job easier. You still need to caulk any doubled-up plates and headers, and it's better to caulk the OSB/ply as you go too. Don't count on sill-gaskets sealing (much)- a foam insulate & seal over foundation sills & rim joists stilll count.
With 1" of ccSPF, 1.5" of XPS and 1/2" of OSB and 4.5" of wet-sprayed cellulose you're looking at ~R29, center cavity, but the whole-wall-R (with the thermal bridging of the framing, studs & plates included) comes in around R23-24-ish, depending on actual framing factors. That's about
R3-4 better than case 2a. (See table 6, and figure 1. ) Your moisture profile is much improved with the 1" of ccSPF compared to case 2a.
If instead, for the same wall thickness you went with 3.5" of XPS on the exterior and frame it 2x4" 16"on center w/cellulose fill no closed-cell flash in the cavity it would be more like R27-28 for a whole-wall R due to the much better thermal break over the framing. It's more framing labor, but might be a wash on foam costs, depending on how many window & door cuts you'd have to fit for the exterior foam adding to installation labor, and how badly they'd hose you for a 1" flash of closed cell in your neighborhood. IIRC EVERYTHING is more expensive in AK, but not always by the same multipliers. Is the installed cost of another 2" of XPS the same or cheaper installed cost as 1" ccSPF? It's close in my neighborhood, and it may be in yours... (or not.) I can buy XPS sheathing for ~50cents/board-foot (f.o.b. the local yard) compared to ccSPF at ~$1.15/board-foot (installed price, no waste factor.) For large flat areas with minimal labor to slap it up it's an easy call, but if there's a lot of cut'n'cobble to detail with possibly large waste factors it may not be so simple, and AK prices probably differ.
Thicker exterior foam and 2x4 construction also ends up being longer screws for the furring, which can be an issue if using fiber-cement siding or something heavy like that. (I'd think in AK locally milled wood siding would be a better deal, and half the weight or less. Painting the back side with primer prior to installation (or buying pre-primed goods) allows the finish paint to hold up quite well on rainscreen-backed wood siding, since there is lower moisture content in (and lower vapor drives from) the wood.