thanks Ivor - basically in the roof, they have put in insulation and then boards and then the loft floor itself has been chipboard and they have put in some kind of Polystyrene rigid insulation there too ? I was thinking some kind of air inlet if they remove a tile?What have you insulated and how?
You should have an air gap between the insulation and roof, with vents in the soffits and ridges. Warm air should naturally rise up and vent out of the top, pulling fresh air in from the bottom.
But any loft room will be the warmest place in the house, whatever you do.
what sort of fan? Please don't say a desktop fan? LOLA fan
You have insulated it, so ventilating it is probably not the best thing to do. It may well be "hot" for a few days a year, and you may want the insulation to be working when the months are cooler.what sort of fan? Please don't say a desktop fan? LOL
I was guessing something like a
Loft Insulation via Tile Vent?
View attachment 308247
That's ventilation of the roof structure, not the room within the roof.You should always have ventilation when the loft is converted, they are usually the giveaway that it's been converted.
Soffit vents at the bottom to let cold air in, tile or ridge vents at or near the top to let hot air out.
This also ensures that condensation doesn't accumulate, otherwise the structural timber is at risk of rotting.
You should have (in order, from outside to in)...
Tiles
Roofing membrane
Ventilated air gap
Insulation
Vapour membrane
Plasterboard
If any are missing then it's a botch job.
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