ROOFING - Shakespeare Does Roofs - Joseph W. Lstiburek
ROOFING - Shakespeare Does Roofs - Joseph W. Lstiburek
ROOFING - Shakespeare Does Roofs - Joseph W. Lstiburek
Insight cold air into your attic does not remove moisture unless
there is heat loss from the building. The heat loss warms
up the incoming cold air giving it the ability to pick up
Shakespeare
moisture and carry it to the outside. All of the attic
ventilation ratio’s – 1 to 300, 1 to 150 were based on little
or no insulation. The code now calls for R-60 in attics.
There is no effective heat loss from the building into the
Does Roofs attic. It gets worse, the relative humidity of the outside air
is very high – vapor pressure is low – hygroscopic
materials like wood, plywood and OSB “see” relative
humidity not vapor pressure. Venting highly insulated
roofs in cold climates actually makes them wet. LOL.
An edited version of this Insight first appeared in the ASHRAE Journal. You want to have some fun, ask a Canadian about how
well the CHIP program worked in the 1980’s. Oops…has
By Joseph W. Lstiburek, Ph.D., P.Eng., Fellow to be an old Canadian. CHIP was the short form for
ASHRAE “Canadian Home Insulation Program” that came out of
the first energy crisis. Everyone got a couple of hundred
To vent, or not to vent…that is the question: dollars to insulate attics. Guess what? The attics got
Whether ‘tis nobler in the mind to suffer colder. Stopped the heat from getting into the attic, but
The slings and arrows of outrageous moisture, not the moisture. Roofs rotted (Photograph 1 and
Or to take arms against them Photograph 2). More oops. To stop the moisture we
And by opposing end them. To rot – to rust, needed to air seal the attic ceilings. Canadians did it first,
To rust perchance to scream - ay, there’s the rub. and best (Photograph 3). Even more oops. Moved the
moisture problem to the building underneath because air
change in the building was reduced. It sometimes got real
With apologies to the Bard of Avon, after several decades bad, caused spillage and backdrafting of combustion
of dealing with roofs I have come to the answer to the appliances and folks died from carbon monoxide
roof vent question: do not vent…except. Great answer, poisoning. Had to install sealed combustion or power
eh? vented combustion appliances and provide controlled
mechanical ventilation.
Vented roofs blow off more than unvented roofs. Vented
roofs burn more than unvented roofs. Vented roofs are
energy inefficient compared to unvented roofs. Vented
roofs cause moisture problems south of the Mason-Dixon
Line and east of Interstate 35 in Texas. Venting a roof in a
hot-humid and mixed humid climate is a very, very bad
idea.
Even if you air seal the attic ceiling, and you handle (Figure 1). An unvented conditioned roof solves this
combustion safety, and you provide controlled ventilation problem (Figure 2).
in the occupied space, venting a roof in a hot-humid and
mixed humid climate causes moisture problems because
the air outside is humid. Note the “humid” in
“hot-humid” and “mixed humid” climate.
Now to the “except” part. The only time you should vent
a roof is to control ice-damming (Photograph 6). We
were here before (BSI-046: Dam Ice Dam). Ice dams
happen when the outside temperature is below freezing,
the roof deck temperature is above freezing and there is
snow on the roof. The warm roof deck causes the snow
on top of the roof deck to melt and the melt water runs
down to the edge of the roof where the water freezes
leading to a buildup of ice and a back-up of water – hence
the term “dam”.
Figure 3: Vented Over Roof Over an Unvented Under Roof Roof -
Note that the air intake for the vented “over-roof” is at the facia and that
the overhang is insulated compensating for cladding thermal plumes
due to incident solar radiation.
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