watercop
Electrical
- Feb 3, 2005
- 7
Subject ICF house under construction near Jax Florida has a flat roof of 3" of poured concrete held up by Hambro metal joists whose top element is embedded in the concrete.
We'll spray 3-5" (haven't decide on precise thickness yet) of closed cell spray foam on the bottom of the concrete roof. That has an aged R-value of about 6 per inch.
However, I don't think I dare feed the full R-6 per inch into my load software because I expect substantial thermal bridging via the steel joists. The upper element of the bar joist sits in poured concrete, which, though covered in a white poolside-type cool deck material, will still get quite hot on a summer afternoon.
About every linear foot or so a 1/2" tube of steel welded to the top chord will emerge through whatever thickness of sprayfoam I specify. There are a total of 400+ such penetrations, and intuition suggests that on a hot day they'll conduct heat enough to feel warm to the touch.
I need a number for that load, either a way to correctly derate the insulation or as an added sensible load on a design day.
I surfed then called Hambro - they expressed curiosity and asked that I call them back should I reach a conclusion, in other words the guy I talked to hadn't the foggiest notion, and no suggestions as to whom I might call.
Anyone here ever run into anything like this?
We'll spray 3-5" (haven't decide on precise thickness yet) of closed cell spray foam on the bottom of the concrete roof. That has an aged R-value of about 6 per inch.
However, I don't think I dare feed the full R-6 per inch into my load software because I expect substantial thermal bridging via the steel joists. The upper element of the bar joist sits in poured concrete, which, though covered in a white poolside-type cool deck material, will still get quite hot on a summer afternoon.
About every linear foot or so a 1/2" tube of steel welded to the top chord will emerge through whatever thickness of sprayfoam I specify. There are a total of 400+ such penetrations, and intuition suggests that on a hot day they'll conduct heat enough to feel warm to the touch.
I need a number for that load, either a way to correctly derate the insulation or as an added sensible load on a design day.
I surfed then called Hambro - they expressed curiosity and asked that I call them back should I reach a conclusion, in other words the guy I talked to hadn't the foggiest notion, and no suggestions as to whom I might call.
Anyone here ever run into anything like this?