Can we use this old insulation between floors for sound proofing?

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We have lots of this (see pic below) old polystyrene insulation which we have removed from our loft as part of a house remodel.

Rather than just throw it away I thought it would make good sound insulation properties between floors (placed between the floor joists).

Are there any issues with this that I should consider? I recall many people say never use polystyrene ceiling tiles due to fire / smoldering risk but would my proposal be ok because it's between floors?

 
Its good insulation but lethal if it does burn.....nasties including carbon monoxide and phosgene I believe.
Personally I'd go for inert block insulation or rockwool equivalent.
John :)
 
Thanks.

Would rockwool offer better sound insulation do you think? Can you point me to a good example product?
 
I'd agree with the rockwool route. Unless you're in a rush, wait until one of the big sheds has a 3 for 2 offer which is what I did.

One thing to think about, and it's the bain of acoustic engineers, is sound bleed through at wall/floor joints. Might be worth over stuffing to compensate.
 
I'd agree with the rockwool route. Unless you're in a rush, wait until one of the big sheds has a 3 for 2 offer which is what I did.

One thing to think about, and it's the bain of acoustic engineers, is sound bleed through at wall/floor joints. Might be worth over stuffing to compensate.

Sorry I didn't understand you msg. You mention sheds because you think it would be good to use as insulation in an outbuilding?
Or then stick with rockwool and use these too???
 
If you don't want it, sell it, because someone will find that perfectly useful as thermal insulation.
 
Oh ok. Builders talk :)

Is there a limit to how much of the Rockwool should be put in before it becomes a hazard of some sort?

Also what's the difference between the ordinary Rockwool and the acoustic one?
 
If you don't want it, sell it, because someone will find that perfectly useful as thermal insulation.

I tried giving it away for free on Freecycle - nobody replied! Suggestions for price if I do manage to sell it?
 
It's worth about half a penny per tonne. Take it to the tip.
 
Well I'd have it! I'd give you £20-30 for everything in the picture. A lot cheaper than buying it from a builders merchant. Assume we're talking at least EPS70 here.
 
Well I'd have it! I'd give you £20-30 for everything in the picture. A lot cheaper than buying it from a builders merchant. Assume we're talking at least EPS70 here.

Hi

Just sent you a private msg. Not sure how I would find out if it is EPS70...whatever that means?
 
The 70 is the grade, the compressive strength. 70 is common for undemanding loads.
 

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