It’s important to have the right amount of insulation in order to keep your home both warm in the winter and cool in the summer. But how much does your home need?
While the attic may be the most visible location in which a home needs insulation, it’s far from the only place a house is insulated.
Exterior walls are the most important walls to be insulated, but it’s still a good idea to insulate interior walls. This is to help keep individual rooms warmer or cooler. Plus, the insulation helps to reduce noise coming from other rooms in the house.
How much insulation a building needs is measured in R-value. The R-value is a measurement that demonstrates the ability of insulation to resist (this is where the R comes from) heat that goes through it. The higher an R-value is, the better the insulation is at keeping heat in or out of a home.
You can determine the R-value of insulation by dividing the insulation’s thickness in inches by its thermal conductivity. To perform the calculation, you can use this formula: Q / t = kAT / d
Fortunately, your insulation should be marked with the R-value so you shouldn’t need to calculate it yourself.
How resistant your insulation needs to be to heat depends on where you live. The further north you live, the higher the R-value on your insulation needs to be. Typically, each location will have a legally required minimum R-value that buildings must meet with their insulation. The United States is divided into zones and the minimum recommended R-value is determined by those zones.
The lower the number of the zone, the lower the required R-value for insulation. For example, the only Zone 1 location in the United States is in the south of Florida. Zone 8, the coldest zone, includes the northernmost tip of Maine, some areas in mountainous regions of Colorado and Wyoming, and the northernmost parts of Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and North Dakota.
Insulation comes in different types, each typically best suited for different areas of a home:
Contact us for all your heating and insulation needs.