Posted By dmaceld on 01 Jan 2012 12:51 AM
Posted By Lbear on 31 Dec 2011 10:56 PM ICF forms typically do not have any buffering capacity of leakage, so even a small leak, that may occur undetected with no durability risks in a wood framed wall, may affect the interior of and ICF building.
My take, ability to soak up water. In a frame wall if you have a roof leak, for example, the water very well may soaked into the top plate before it ever reaches the interior drywall. With ICF the foam won't soak it up so any water leaking through the roof can just run on over and down the foam and into the drywall.
I'm inclined to agree it is a possible issue, but from a practical standpoint it is a very unlikely issue. I think it's mostly a case of excess caution on the part of the report writer. I would dismiss it as a genuine concern. Theoretical, yes, realistic, no.
Lbear, I'm going to research this a bit and get back to you. First, however, you might want to start a new thread cause tacking this on is just going to further dilute your previous thread with more unrelated stuff and unrelated comments.
Anyway, I took a quick look at the report
http://www.buildingscience.com/docu...l-analysisand it strikes me that these folks don't know a great deal about ICF. But I also may not be looking at the correct report. The first clue was the ICF they are using either doesn't exist or at least is not representative of 99% of the market. They used an ICF with dimensions 2" foam, 4" concrete, 2" foam (8" overall thickness) and an R-value of 16. To my knowledge this ICF doesn't exist. Your standard ICF with a 4" core is 9 1/4 o 9" thick with an R-value of 22 and actually most of the market for ICFs is actually 6" core (also roughly R22).
Regarding the buffering capacity -- I don't buy much of that at all. The last thing you want in a wood wall is a water being absorbed into the wood that you know nothing about so that it doesn't inconvenience you. Mold comes to mind but repeating this a number of times (like with a small leak you don't know about over time) will eventually cause failure due to rot. This may not be the case for a non-wood wall. Nevertheless, I'm from the school that if a leak exists it's better to know about it today than to find out after your wall or roof fails. That said, with ICF, and I don't think it's somehow a "feature" if you put a dripping faucet on your ICF window ledge or top of wall the concrete will absord a huge amount of water (like a sidewalk) until it is saturated and startes to leak out.
Water causes far more damage to conventional walls than ICF walls. For example -- in some of the recent floods where both ICF and conventional homes were completely soaked (flooded) -- the ICF walls remained intact and sheetrock was replaced sometimes to 4-5 feet high -- the wood wall homes (as well as interior walls in ICF homes) were typically taken down completely to the slab. Regards.
P.S. I did find a second report (more closely associated with your link) that showed 2.5 inch foam and R-20 continuous insulation.