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3398 Washington Road
Atlanta, GA 30344
USA

773.398.5288

Advanced residential construction and home improvement consulting and owner's advocacy in Atlanta, using the latest building performance diagnostic and modeling techniques and tools. Airtightness, insulation, HVAC, ventilation, moisture, and air quality and EMF consulting for homeowners and building professionals alike.

Videos/Podcasts/Articles

Home performance articles and stories from the field with internationally respected building forensics guru Corbett Lunsford at the Building Performance Workshop. Hear new episodes of the Building Performance Podcast, see new videos from the Home Performance YouTube channel, and learn all about how diagnostic testing (more than an 'Energy Audit') can make home improvement and new home construction a proven process!

Filtering by Category: Dear Corbett

Dear Corbett: How do I Protect Against Both Air and Water?

Corbett Lunsford

Corbett - I have what I hope is a great 'old house' question for you regarding my home. I am getting my attic sealed and insulated, but I'm leaving the basement now to help troubleshoot if I am still pulling in air this winter.

I just discovered that my sill plate has plenty of gaps where one can even see daylight through the width of the entire foundation.  In unfinished part of the basement, the sill plate is easy enough to access and fill with cans of spray foam. 

However, in the finished areas, the drywall and wall blocking goes above the sill plate, and it is not accessible. It would be possible to use foam on the exterior, between the foundation wall and the original wood siding, which is underneath the aluminum siding.  This would also provide pest control, which would explain why I found a few ants this year.  

The question is, will that cause a moisture problem? Am I sealing in moisture that would normally drip out from behind the aluminum siding through the old wood siding?  Would it effectively direct the moisture or water into the house along the sill plate?  Is it simple to do, or would I be taking off the lower three slats of siding to properly seal?

Looking for details such as this online is very difficult, so I'm wondering if you already know of a great solution! ~Curt P.

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Thanks for your question, Curt! Though air sealing is of critical importance, when we're talking about air sealing from the exterior, make sure you don't create any moisture or durability issues for the house.

Spray foam used for air sealing is like a sponge, and it can wick water from under the siding into the house- I'd be leery of trying to fix it from the exterior for this reason.  If at all possible, seal the sill plate from inside, but if it's not possible, then just make sure you're able to monitor those areas that we're not sure about.

There's no standard solution I'm aware of for DIY repair of this issue, which is why I'd recommend having a professional take a look at it.  Just make sure they guarantee you a measurable test result of some type after home improvements have been done- that's the secret!
~Corbett

More than an 'Energy Audit' for Manufactured/Mobile Homes

Corbett Lunsford

Oh Guru of Home Performance,
Would you shed some light on the intricacies of auditing manufactured homes?? I have an audit to do on a 17 year old mobile home- I will do a blower door test with infrared... other than the walkthrough assessment and evaluating the duct-work, checking the underneath for the insulation quality, and what else possibly could be tested?
Thank you! Sincerely,
Kevin J.

tinyhomebuilders.jpg

Hi Kevin-
Thanks for reaching out!  If you keep your head in the 4-3-2-1 space (see below) and listen to the client’s pain (comfort/EE/air quality), then use testing to pinpoint the opportunities for improvement, it’s the same as analyzing any other type of building.  Your approach sounds solid, and I’d use any other diagnostics to solve the client’s specific pain points.  Think about what Motivational Metrics you can use to help your client take action with solutions.
Use my book Home Performance Diagnostics to help you perform any tests that seem applicable to pinpointing the cause and proving the measured home improvement.
Best of luck, and TAKE PICTURES AND DOCUMENT YOUR PROCESS SO YOU CAN WRITE A COOL ARTICLE ABOUT IT!  Have a great weekend.
Looking Forward,
Corbett