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It was amazing to me how it worked out. We sprayed
a lot of foam in Brent's house, and it cost him quite
a bit of money because it was such a large home. Always
after when I would meet him, he would tell me his heat
bill was less than any of his rent houses or homes
of anybody else he knew. And his home was two or three
times larger. Also, the builder started having me insulate
most of his new custom built houses. He told me he
would explain to his clients the best insulation was
the spray-in-place urethane. It would cost a little
more, but it was by far the best. Most of the owners
opted for the urethane. Never have I had a customer
tell me that he did not save money by using the urethane
spray-in-place insulation. You can spend all the time
you want with R-values and "k" factors, and "prove" on
paper there is no way the urethane can do the insulation
job that the fiberglass will. In the real world, I
can assure anyone there is no way fiber insulation
can be as effective as spray-in-place urethane -- not
even close.
R-value tables are truly part of the "Fairy Tale." They
show the solid and the fiber insulations side by side,
implying they can be compared. The fact is, without
taking installation conditions into account, comparisons
are meaningless. Spray-in-place urethane foam provides
its own vapor barrier, water barrier, and wind barrier.
None of the other insulations are as effective without
special care taken at installation. The fiber insulations
must be protected from wind, water and water vapor.
Again the tables need a second table to state installation
conditions.
Consider the following anecdotes:
Meadow Gold Company was going to build a freezer in
Idaho Falls, Idaho. Chet, the plant manager was a good
friend of the local Butler dealer. The local Butler
dealer and I had become good friends. A Butler building
does not lend itself very well to a freezer if you
are going to insulate the freezer with expanded polystyrene.
So the three of us got together and planned a freezer
that would accommodate the needs of Meadow Gold yet
be built of a Butler building and be properly insulated.
This was in my first year of spraying polyurethane
foam, and at that time I believed all the literature
and knew what we were doing was going to be just right.
It turned out even better. The then current R-value
table showed one inch of urethane equal to 2.5 inches
of expanded polystyrene. So, I suggested we spray the
metal building with four inches of urethane to replace
the 10 inches of expanded polystyrene normally used
by Meadow Gold for freezers.
Meadow Gold Company was going to build a freezer in
Idaho Falls, Idaho. Chet, the plant manager was a good
friend of the local Butler dealer. The local Butler
dealer and I had become good friends. A Butler building
does not lend itself very well to a freezer if you
are going to insulate the freezer with expanded polystyrene.
So the three of us got together and planned a freezer
that would accommodate the needs of Meadow Gold yet
be built of a Butler building and be properly insulated.
This was in my first year of spraying polyurethane
foam, and at that time I believed all the literature
and knew what we were doing was going to be just right.
It turned out even better. The then current R-value
table showed one inch of urethane equal to 2.5 inches
of expanded polystyrene. So, I suggested we spray the
metal building with four inches of urethane to replace
the 10 inches of expanded polystyrene normally used
by Meadow Gold for freezers.
Chet considered one alternative to his predicament
was to turn one of the older freezers that had been
used as a cooler back into a freezer. Then maybe he
could make a cooler out of the new building with the
just the one compressor. It was not a satisfactory
arrangement, but it maybe could work. The other thing
Chet kept telling us was that he would know as soon
as he turned on the freezer equipment whether or not
the building would work. When I pressed him, he said
that normally it takes five days to bring a freezer
down to 10 F below zero -- needed for ice cream. When
he turned on the new freezer, with only the one compressor,
the temperature dropped to 18F degrees below zero by
the second morning. They had their freezer. It ran
the entire summer using only the single compressor.
A few weeks after start up of the freezer, I was visited
by a Meadow Gold engineer from Chicago. He wanted to
know exactly what we had done to insulate the freezer.
One compressor should not be able to hold the temperature
as it was doing. I explained to him exactly what we
had done. He seemed satisfied and he left. A few weeks
later he showed up again with his boss. We went to
the plant and verified with an ice pick the thickness
of the foam. It was indeed four inches in the walls
and five inches in the ceiling. Here again they reiterated
that the building should not be operating as it was.
What they were telling me was that even though I had
used one inch of urethane to replace 2.5 inches of
expanded polystyrene, the building was still requiring
only 50 percent of the normal compressor power for
cooling. As you can imagine, the experience made me
a lot more bold, and I used the information to sell
more freezer insulation jobs.
One of our largest freezer insulation projects was
a sixty thousand square foot freezer at Clearfield,
Utah. I was able to talk the general contractor into
letting us insulate with spray-in-place polyurethane
foam the brand-new all-concrete freezer he was building.
This building was the 12th in a chain of freezers.
My friend Bob, the contractor, had taken it upon himself
to make the switch from the ten inches of expanded
polystyrene to four inches of urethane with a fifth
inch on the roof. The building was built with tilt
up concrete insulated on the interior side of the concrete
with spray-in-place urethane. We then sprayed on a
three-fourths of an inch thick layer of plaster as
the thermal barrier. Over the pre-stressed concrete
roof panels, we put five inches of spray-in-place urethane
and then covered it with hot tar and rock. (This is
an old CPR-specification).
I was on the job the last day. As we finished up the
owner showed up. He had expected to see ten inches
of expanded polystyrene, and here was four inches of
urethane. I told him he would like the four inches
of urethane as it would be even better than the expanded
polystyrene, based on my previous experience. He told
me he was sicker than a dog because he felt like there
was no way that could be true. It was too late for
him to do anything about it. If he could have, he would
have changed the contract instantly, but he was stuck
and felt stuck.
They had 12 other similar size freezers, except the
others were insulated with expanded polystyrene. The
normal way of operating them was to use three large
compressor assemblies. Two of the compressors would
be needed all summer to keep the building cold, and
the third one would be a standby unit, in case one
of the other two had problems.
About a year later, I received a phone call from one
of the managers. He asked me if I had time to insulate
another sixty thousand square foot freezer in Clearfield,
Utah. I assured him we had the time, the inclination,
and the excitement to do it, but I thought the owner
wanted nothing to do with urethane foam insulation.
The manager explained to me that not only had the Clearfield
freezer operated better than any other freezer in their
line, it had operated for less than half the costs
of any others. They were adding another sixty thousand
square feet without adding more compressors. The compressor
power available to them because of the urethane insulation
efficiency allowed them to do it. The building had
run very nicely through the hot part of the summer
with just one compressor. Now they would be able to
run two buildings off of two compressors and still
have a spare.
Again, this is anecdotal evidence, but let me assure
you that you will get the same results if you do the
same thing as we have. I have insulated too many buildings
now to know that this will happen in every case. Never
can you use an R-value from a fiber insulation and
compare it to the R-value of a foam insulation. Nor
can you use the R-value of a foam insulation if it
is in sheet form and compare it to the R-value of the
foam insulation if it is spray-in-place. Spray-in-place
polyurethane is an absolute minimum of three to ten
times as effective as any other insulation available
today.
During the late 1970s, the FTC went after the urethane
foam suppliers for misleading advertising especially
with regard to fire claims. A consent decree followed.
It destroyed a tremendous amount of confidence in the
use of urethane. Up to that point, Commonwealth Edison
would give Gold Medallion approval for homes insulated
with 1.25 inches of spray-in-place urethane in the
side walls of masonry constructed homes. True, that
was anecdotal evidence, but also true, it worked. Much
work was done in the early 1970s using a 1.25 inches
urethane as a replacement for wall insulation in a
home. Not only did it replace the wall insulation,
it also replaced the exterior sheathing. The buildings
are stronger and better insulated when sprayed with
the 1.25 inches of urethane.
Understanding the two purposes of insulation gives
a standard to measure the insulations:
I. Heat loss
There is a little understood part about insulation
that needs to be covered. There is a substantial difference
between insulation for temperature control and insulation
for heat loss control. For instance, the graph (below)
shows the heat loss control of the spray-in-place urethane
foam insulation. Any insulation will have a similar
graph but with thicker amounts of insulation. This
graph points out that more insulation is not necessarily
cost effective. There is a point where more insulation
is pointless from a total heat loss perspective.
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