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is 3 mil plastic thick enough for a vapor barrier in a bedroom wall

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nANCY C

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Jun 2, 2014, 9:44:02 AM6/2/14
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I am putting insulation in a bedroom wall in my home,i was told i also
have to install a vapor barrier. I have 3 mil plastic but i don't know if
thats enough. My home was built in 1892 and it is balloon frame
construction. and there is no insulation in walls. We live in the midwest
just outside Chicago,and had much experience with severe winters.

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trader_4

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Jun 2, 2014, 9:57:02 AM6/2/14
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3 mils isn't much. Even if it was enough to be effective,
getting it installed without tearing it, making holes, etc
I don't think will be easy. A product designed as a real vapor
barrier is several times as thick.

nestork

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Jun 2, 2014, 12:21:06 PM6/2/14
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Even though it's only 3 mil, it would probably work fine, but I agree
with Trader that it'll be harder to work with because it'll be easily
damaged.

Whatever you do, DON'T use two layers of 3 mil plastic to make a 6 mil
vapour barrier. If water ever gets between those two sheets (from a
flood, or whatever) it'll never dry out and it'll be a breeding ground
for mold.

The building code here in Canada requires 6 mil polyethylene plastic for
vapour barrier.

But, the truth is that when companies make this plastic, it's thickness
can vary. So, if you buy plastic that claims it's 6 mil, that means
that the thinnest area in the roll is guaranteed to be 6 mil or more.

You'd be better off just buying something labeled as "vapour barrier",
in which case it's probably about 6 mil on average. The stuff that's
guaranteed to be at least 6 mil at it's thinnest point costs a lot more
than something that just claims to be "vapour barrier".




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nestork

Tekkie®

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Jun 3, 2014, 7:31:23 PM6/3/14
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nANCY C posted for all of us...

And I know how to SNIP
I just got a sample of a new vapor barrier material that has some plastic
squiggles on it to allow the moisture that inevitability gets behind the
siding
to drain. I can't remember the name.
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Tekkie
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