How to thermally UNCOUPLE your concrete slab.

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 22. 08. 2021
  • Watch our entire free catalog of content:
    buildshownetwork.com/
    Sign up for the BSN News letter!
    buildshownetwork.com/newsletter
    Jake talks foundation details of this slab on grade home. He shows how to thermally uncouple from the ground and perimeter.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 51

  • @bobcat2222
    @bobcat2222 Před 2 lety +6

    A stone countertop that feels colder is not “emitting temperature back to you”. What is happening is the stone is taking some heat from your hand via conduction. Stone at room temp 72F is colder than your hand (somewhat under 98F). Heat moves from hot to cold or rather from more to less. Temperature is a measure of heat. It doesn’t get emitted. Cold is the absence of heat so it also doesn’t emit.

  • @franklinmade396
    @franklinmade396 Před 2 lety +2

    Did you continue the same details under door openings? I can see some form work in the video that appears the details may change under the door threshold.

  • @lexiecrewther7038
    @lexiecrewther7038 Před rokem

    Insulation does not "uncouple". It just delays the thermal transfer for an hour per inch. 6 inch foam delays heat transfer by 6hrs. By morning, an insulated house without heating is EXACTLY the same temperature as outside. Then it will take 6hrs to heat up again

  • @ncbarndobuild
    @ncbarndobuild Před 2 lety

    Do you tie the slab to the footing or stem wall with a cold joint? Getting ready to do something very similar here in NC.

  • @BK-fy2xi
    @BK-fy2xi Před 2 lety +1

    So how high do you run the sidewall insulation? It looks like they have concrete all the way to the footing.

  • @Adesico87
    @Adesico87 Před 2 lety

    Jake!! Come build in south Johnson County Kansas!!

  • @billwilljulz
    @billwilljulz Před rokem

    Jake, is a perimeter French drain added to this foundation? How does one go about installing that with the “trench forming” method?

  • @AntsAasma
    @AntsAasma Před 2 lety +7

    "We can't completely solve that issue" - actually you can if you put hydronic heating into the slab. Can't beat the comfort and energy efficiency of underfloor heating.

    • @frankp9573
      @frankp9573 Před 2 lety

      True but he said it was a rental so this is a cheaper method. I think that's what he meant

  • @w7834
    @w7834 Před 2 lety

    I've got a house with a bomb shelter for a basement, a 6" slab covers the entire basement with 2x6 on sleepers and 1-1/2" of plywood for the first floor deck over the top of that. The first floor deck gets cooold in the winter and I need to remedy that in the near future.
    I am wondering if I could remove the first floor deck, add 2"-4" of foam insulation to the top of bomb shelter/basement cap and then pour the remainder in 4"-6" of concrete?

  • @thervmodman1038
    @thervmodman1038 Před 2 lety +8

    I understand the footing but would like to know is how deep is your footing pour not including your 2x10s.
    Thank you!

  • @ericwotton2046
    @ericwotton2046 Před 2 lety

    Simple!!

  • @Boscovius
    @Boscovius Před 2 lety

    So the takeaway is that by insulating a slab-on-grade in the prescribed manner, substantial heat savings and comfort gains may be had prior to taking the next step of intalling in-slab hydronic heating.

  • @John-tq4bf
    @John-tq4bf Před 2 lety

    Did I see in floor heating?

  • @te1ephraq
    @te1ephraq Před 2 lety +1

    So the outside concrete is load bearing from the walls and it is not connected to the slab? Would not it be weakened compared to solid foundation?

    • @Zorlig
      @Zorlig Před 2 lety +1

      Not really, the footing is what holds the weight

  • @randyanderson1983
    @randyanderson1983 Před rokem

    I didn’t know ACI had pumps still going a year ago? Or has someone bought that 46m and not re-stickerEd the truck?

  • @kevinmickelson5128
    @kevinmickelson5128 Před 2 lety

    I unserdtand decoupling the edge of the slad as the concrete edge is exposed to the weather, in this video negative 9 degrees. What i am struggling with is the necessity in insulating below the slab due to the average earth temperature under a slab being 55 degrees. it seems like there is not much bang for the buck because that 2 inch eps is expensive.

    • @imwteach
      @imwteach Před 2 lety

      You are still getting a minimum -15 delta that you will loose heat 24/7 365 days a year!

    • @davefoc
      @davefoc Před 2 lety

      I thought the idea might be that the temperature of the ground next to the foundation is cooled significantly by heat transfer through the foundation and heat transfer from the ground outside the foundation.

    • @kevinmickelson5128
      @kevinmickelson5128 Před 2 lety

      @@imwteach I'm not sure a 15 degree delta is worth the cost or trouble. The wall insulation is battling a 50 dgree delta so that cost makes sense.

    • @imwteach
      @imwteach Před 2 lety +1

      @@kevinmickelson5128 Still, a 15 degree delta over the life of the home makes it worthwhile to insulate. After living in our current home for 12 years with in slab radiant heat I wouldn't have anything else...I also wish I had placed more insulation under the slab. I currently have 2" of Styrofoam and should have gone 4 or 6!

    • @nc3826
      @nc3826 Před 2 lety

      Insulating foam glass aggregate such as Aeroaggregates will not breakdown like a petro-chemical foam... and allows drainage so it replace most of the stone aggregate...

  • @jesseh2302
    @jesseh2302 Před 2 lety

    I’m in climate zone 2 so really nobody insulates slabs, but I have concrete floors and the west side of the house has a concrete porch that is connected and you can definitely feel the heat come through the slab if you’re barefoot. My question is this though. Is there a way to pour the slab all at once and insulate? I can just imagine the look from my concrete subcontractor if I told him we were going to pour separate days…

    • @imwteach
      @imwteach Před 2 lety

      Build with Insulated Concrete Form blocks and you solve several problems at once

    • @bpdp379
      @bpdp379 Před 2 lety

      Have the contractor add the depth of your insulation to the total outside measurements and add the insulation to the inside of the form. I also added large screws into the foam to couple the foam tot he concrete. That’s how I did a frost protected shallow foundation. Super easy.

    • @billwilljulz
      @billwilljulz Před rokem

      @@bpdp379 I plan to do the same thing. May I ask, did you use a “protective coating” outside of the insulation? If so, what did you use?

    • @bpdp379
      @bpdp379 Před rokem +1

      @@billwilljulz not below grade. Above grade I did add a flat stock metal flashing to protect the foam from UV light and physical damage like weed whackers and such.

    • @bpdp379
      @bpdp379 Před rokem

      That was added after the pour.

  • @noreaction1
    @noreaction1 Před 2 lety

    Now how do we seal the foundation from water and ice?

  • @10tenman10
    @10tenman10 Před 2 lety

    15 mil poly membrane then a 2" closed cell insulation (taped) then 4 inches of concrete. I like the insulation but shouldn't the footers be insulated too?

  • @craigslist04
    @craigslist04 Před 2 lety +4

    A lot of words for... insulate bottom and sides.

  • @MrSparkums
    @MrSparkums Před 2 lety

    Basically turns the slab into an energy battery..

  • @acevirginian2203
    @acevirginian2203 Před 2 lety

    What happens when the bottom foam gets squished into a pancake? Not much insulation then.
    You just have to have a crawlspace or need some other substrate...under the slab.

    • @DT-vc7hd
      @DT-vc7hd Před 2 lety

      I was wondering about this myself -- would like to hear the Build Show address this.

    • @intoxigated
      @intoxigated Před 2 lety +15

      CS(10/Y) - amount of pressure needed for 10% deflection of average XPS is ~ 300 kpa = 300 kN/m² = 30 t/m².
      Unless your main building material is lead you would be having hard time "squishing it into pancake".

    • @daveklein2826
      @daveklein2826 Před 2 lety +2

      Will never happen

    • @Superwoodputtie
      @Superwoodputtie Před 2 lety +3

      This is an issue for certain types of foam, but xps should be able to take the weight.

    • @acevirginian2203
      @acevirginian2203 Před 2 lety +2

      @@Superwoodputtie Thanks for that info gentlemen. very useful info.
      only reason I was against slab was that... cold plus moisture... if those are resolved, I am sold to the idea.
      do elaborate on exactly what type of XPS is best suited... please.