Hi,
I was getting a lot of air going up alongside downlights in the ceiling of a converted loft space, so decided to replace them with surface lights. When I removed the downlights, I found a HUGE area - say a 2 foot radius - without any insulation at all, ceiling to roof, and quite a strong wind - and I do not mean just air movement - so I tried filling the space with fiberglass, so that it was reasonably fluffy. In the end, there was still plenty of air movement - more than I would have liked, but I could not see how to do more, so I sealed the ceiling and now have a surface light.
But now I've seen a caution that if when I add fiberglass, I lift the plastic membrane just under the tiles, I may be blocking the drainage route for any water that might get past the tiles - blocking them from running all the way down the plastic and out of the roof space. The comment was that there is supposed to be a bit of sagging in this plastic that allows this flow under any cross batons. But when I look at the plastic membrane, it looks perfectly flat, and not sagging at all.
Do I need to open up the ceiling again to remove some of the fiberglass?
Thank you for any help in this.
MidAtlantian
I was getting a lot of air going up alongside downlights in the ceiling of a converted loft space, so decided to replace them with surface lights. When I removed the downlights, I found a HUGE area - say a 2 foot radius - without any insulation at all, ceiling to roof, and quite a strong wind - and I do not mean just air movement - so I tried filling the space with fiberglass, so that it was reasonably fluffy. In the end, there was still plenty of air movement - more than I would have liked, but I could not see how to do more, so I sealed the ceiling and now have a surface light.
But now I've seen a caution that if when I add fiberglass, I lift the plastic membrane just under the tiles, I may be blocking the drainage route for any water that might get past the tiles - blocking them from running all the way down the plastic and out of the roof space. The comment was that there is supposed to be a bit of sagging in this plastic that allows this flow under any cross batons. But when I look at the plastic membrane, it looks perfectly flat, and not sagging at all.
Do I need to open up the ceiling again to remove some of the fiberglass?
Thank you for any help in this.
MidAtlantian
