

The typical 3600 sf home insulated with fiberglass batts
will leak enough heated & cooled air to fill
3-4 Goodyear blimps per day...
and you'll pay to heat and cool it all.
The SOLUTION?
Select Icynene® foam
insulation for your walls
and the new AtticSEAL sealant in your attic...
to stop your new home from leaking so badly!

The Enemy Is Air Infiltration. Air infiltration is the
enemy of every family intent on saving energy dollars in their home and
trying to make the home more comfortable. While
most builders and homeowners concentrate on trying to increase R-value in
the different parts of the energy envelope, research consistently measures
air leakage as responsible for as
55% of the energy lost in a
home. Yet the glass strands used to make the most commonly used
insulation, fiberglass batts, have virtually no ability to stop the flow
of air.
There is another strategy to help you reduce the
amount of air infiltration. Spray foam is an airflow retarder. In
fact, in a 3 1/2" sample, Icynene® foam is 24 times less permeable to air
infiltration than a fiberglass batt. And since it also fits better than a
fiberglass batt, with the foam actually adhering to the studs in the wall
cavity, the combination insures the best possible reduction in air infiltration
in the walls of a new home.
SORRY...Most Attics Leak Like
a Sieve...Yours Included! Most housing experts believe
that the attic is the largest air
leakage area in the entire house. Air rises from the conditioned areas of
the house into the attic at will. Recessed lights create virtual
"chimneys" for air leakage into the attic and out of the
building. Ceiling boxes provide another escape route for conditioned
air. Unsealed penetrations into the attic for wiring, plumbing and heat
ducts let your heat leak out, as well. Perhaps the biggest leak area, however,
is the thousand or more feet of cracks along the indoor and exterior partitions
where the drywall does not seal tightly against the ceiling plates. The
cumulative openings from these seemingly insignificant cracks are the equivalent
of opening a double hung window about 4" and leaving it open 24 hours a
day. Imagine the energy loss on a windy 10 degree winter night if you left
a window open. You say "I'd never do that," but unless you make
provisions to seal your attic, you'll be leaving it open to leak by about the same amount all the time.
"Well," some builders argue, "those
cracks are all covered by insulation." So what? From our
discussion about the properties of fiberglass in the box below, we want to
hammer home the point that fiberglass strands do not stop air movement.
And fiberglass won't even begin to seal the 1000 or more of running feet of
cracks into the attic through which your heated or cooled air will leak away.
So, if you want an efficient home, don't count on fiberglass batts or blown-in
insulation to stop the leaks.
FACT! A FURNACE FILTER WOULDN'T STOP AIR FLOW...
and neither will a fiberglass batt.
To stop air leakage into and out of your
home, you have to choose the
right material, and we submit, fiberglass insulation IS NOT THE RIGHT
MATERIAL!
Think about it. Furnace manufacturers use glass
strands (fiberglass) to make furnace filters,
because the glass strands provide nearly no resistance to the airflow of
the furnace. In other words, air goes through them easily, i.e.
they don't stop air!
Ironically,
most insulation manufacturers make their product out of those same glass
strands, and by merely "piling them a little deeper" they want you to
believe that their insulation will suddenly stop behaving like a furnace
filter and become an air barrier. Unfortunately, they (and you) can't have it both
ways. A glass strand is still a glass strand, and the insulating
and air sealing properties of fiberglass strands are still mediocre no
matter how deep you pile them.
Bottom line...if you choose an insulation
that can't stop cold air from infiltrating into your house, then it
can't stop the air you have paid to heat or cool from leaking back out,
either. And
you have made a BAD insulation decision.
And that's a fact, no matter what anybody
tries to tell you!
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Find a Cure for Air Leakage - Spray Foam Does it Best.
How do foam houses perform 30% - 50% better than homes
with fiberglass when the R-values in the homes are supposedly the
same? Four reasons...foam fits better, it doesn't allow air to leak
through it, its R-value doesn't decline when it is cold or the wind is
blowing, and it doesn't allow energy robbing convection looping to steal your
heat. So seal the walls with Icynene®
foam. And, if you can afford it, seal the attic, as well.
If not, be sure to
use the patented
AtticSeal method
described in 2.
below.

Two Ways to Seal an Attic.
In fact, we have two suggested ways to get excellent efficiency
in the attic and still save money:
1. If You Have a Reasonable Budget:
If your budget will allow, we suggest that you order a 3 1/2" layer
of foam sprayed across the entire attic ceiling to insulate it and seal
it, and then, if required, increase the R-value to 30 to meet the building code by
blowing in inexpensive loose fill insulation over the top.

This attic is sealed
with Icynene®.
An application of blown-in insulation over the top
completes the job
and creates an incredibly efficient ceiling.
2. An Alternate Plan for
Strained Budgets: If your budget is being stretched, skip the foam and order an application
of AtticSeal Elastomeric Sealant
(U.S. Patent#
6,651,402) sprayed under high pressure into all the
ceiling cracks BEFORE your blown-in insulation is installed. It will stop
a great deal of the air loss into the attic, and give the loose fill
insulation the best chance to do its job, by stopping the air leakage it
can't control. In a test with
AtticSeal
Sealant, we reduced
the air loss three
total air changes a
day by sealing the
attic cracks with AtticSeal for about a third of the cost of a 3 1/2" application
of sprayed foam. For those who prefer ceiling batts, but
recognize the fact that they need to stop air loss into the attic, another
new product,
AtticSeal Self-Stick Strips,
are now available. A website
for these products (atticseal.com) is currently available.
Or, feel free to call Foam InSEALators
of Maryland & Virginia at (301) 948-1600.
We are the
authorized Dealer
for AtticSeal
products in the
Washington D.C.
metropolitan area.

Wherever a ceiling
plate appears in the attic, there's a leak area to be filled.
With
the low cost AtticSeal process being installed above, we spray a thick stretchy
acrylic sealant into the cracks under high pressure to form a permanent seal.
The result? Your
heating costs won't "go through the roof."

WANT TO SAVE
ABOUT 40% IN
ENERGY COSTS
IN YOUR NEW
HOME?
Based upon
our
experience
with spray
foam over
the past 11
years and
the recent
development
of the new
AtticSeal
Sprayable
Elastomeric
Sealant, we
believe that
if you
insulate
your new
home with
The Icynene
Insulation
System®
in the walls
and band
joists and
also install
one of the
AtticSeal
products for
your attic,
you will
have a
reasonable
expectation
of 40% lower
heating
costs for
your
home than if
you
insulated
your home
with
fiberglass
batts
alone.
We
understand
that family
energy use
can vary,
and so do
houses, but
this program
is very
sound and
offers you a
great
opportunity
to build an
energy
conscious
home.
The
alternative
is not a
very good
one...joining
the chorus
of people
complaining
about their
high heating
bills in the
new homes
they thought
were "well
insulated."
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