Piece of cake. Easiet part of the job so far. Guy showed up, I gave him money, and in return he gave me spray foam.Nice work Jim, how was that spray foam to work with?
My buddy in Meigs County built his house and sprayed with the closed cell foam. His electric bill during the hot part of summer was literally a fraction of what they were used to in their other house.Piece of cake. Easiet part of the job so far. Guy showed up, I gave him money, and in return he gave me spray foam.
Seriously though, this closed cell foam is awesome. More expensive than open cell, but a higher R factor per inch thickness, complete moisture barrier, and adds up to 40% strength to the exterior walls. I’m glad I went this route instead of fiberglass or other traditional types of insulation. I’m sure it won’t take me long to make up the extra cost in energy savings.
That’s great to hear. The more positive reviews I hear the better I feel about it. When you only hear from a few people, you question whether it’s really that good, or if people simply tell themselves it is so they can rationalize the increased expense. We contemplated hiring a painter when it’s all said and done. My thought was I’d much rather pay someone to do spray foam and paint the walls myself. These walls aren’t coming down again in my lifetime (hopefully) so I’d just rather bite the bullet now and do it right.My buddy in Meigs County built his house and sprayed with the closed cell foam. His electric bill during the hot part of summer was literally a fraction of what they were used to in their other house.
Any time pal! Stop over for a tour!Man JB you have been a busy man!! Looking good and love the call on the closed cell foam. I would bet it is the cost that steers people away from it, plenty of proof out there it surpasses bat insulation types.
I just told the Mrs. I am overdue to come see ya and drop off the boys monster truck, check out the farm, etc.
Very very busy indeed Jim! Looks great buddy! Looking forward to seeing the final product...I’ve reached a really big moment in the project. Not quite the finish line, but a huge mental victory considering where we started.
Finally... drywall is coming tomorrow.
A couple hundred 2x4’s, 30 sheets of plywood, 6000 crown staples, 12 tubes of liquid nails, 120-ft of Pex pipe, countless construction screws and nails, 600-ft of wire, 1200 sq ft of closed-cell spray foam... and I can’t even tell you how many man hours now at this point. Finally, it’s looking like a house should look. I couldn’t help but stand there, look around, and smile just before I shut the lights out tonight. God is good.
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24 layers, 3 roosters. Gonna eat 2 of the roosters eventually though. Only enough room for one now that they are crowing.Looks good Jesse. How many ya have now?
Started my stream/pond this last week.View attachment 123776