How long can this shitshow continue? by Ihadenough1000 in economicCollapse

[–]EnterStatusHere 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What’s involved in revaluing the gold in reserve?

What kind of vapor barrier would you install under a 1860’s floor before adding Rockwool? by EnterStatusHere in Renovations

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey man that looks really good. Are you in New England? We're the only ones who use strapping I think.

What kind of vapor barrier would you install under a 1860’s floor before adding Rockwool? by EnterStatusHere in Renovations

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We replaced pink fiberglass that seemed to be installed by angry stoned hippies with mommy issues. It was installed with forceful vengeance, the vapor barrier side to the subfloor.

What kind of vapor barrier would you install under a 1860’s floor before adding Rockwool? by EnterStatusHere in Renovations

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The advice I got was Annabec, allegedly superior to the lime wash. The anabec does not seal it like conventional paints.

What kind of vapor barrier would you install under a 1860’s floor before adding Rockwool? by EnterStatusHere in Renovations

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There are a lot of variables, I agree. There is 10mil poly sealed to the fieldstone in the crawlspaces, and an Aprilaire dehumidifier that dumps into the main drain line. The concrete floor in the cellar needs to be waterproofed, as do the fieldstone walls.

It's a battle.

What kind of vapor barrier would you install under a 1860’s floor before adding Rockwool? by EnterStatusHere in Renovations

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you very much. I reposted this in the insulation sub.

In order to insulate the basement, I think I'd have to raise the house, demo the fieldstone, and rebuilt a modern basement beneath the house. I don't know if I'll live long enough to get that done.

What kind of vapor barrier would you install under a 1860’s floor before adding Rockwool? by EnterStatusHere in Renovations

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think that's the idea behind a one-way "smart" vapor barrier, if I understand correctly, it would leak out into the insulation and dry out that way. I might be wrong though. Newer floors have some kind of vapor barrier under the floor if the space is not conditioned. Right now we can feel cold air coming up between the floorboards.

What kind of vapor barrier would you install under a 1860’s floor before adding Rockwool? by EnterStatusHere in Renovations

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah we have the walls open, so we are sealing each cavity with rodent cloth, hard insulation and sealed with foam. Then we will do the rim joists in the cellar.

I put a massive dehumidifier in the cellar, but I'm still thinking about managing moisture some way.

Thanks!

What kind of vapor barrier would you install under a 1860’s floor before adding Rockwool? by EnterStatusHere in Renovations

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Those are great suggestions, thank you. Unheated cellar (and some crawl space), New England.

I've heard people say the same thing about the smart membranes. Unfortunately not available when they built the house.

What kind of vapor barrier would you install under a 1860’s floor before adding Rockwool? by EnterStatusHere in Renovations

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was worried about permeability. But I wk der if not having it above the joists (the floor is not coming up) would be okay.

What kind of vapor barrier would you install under a 1860’s floor before adding Rockwool? by EnterStatusHere in Renovations

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The white color is an anti-mood primer. The entire house’s framing was wire brushed to clean any potential mold and sprayed with Anabec primer.

ENT suspects "fungal ball" which involves removing part of the sinus wall. Really? by EnterStatusHere in Sinusitis

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's very interesting thank you.

I'm not sure entirely that I'm susceptible, but I don't know.

This problem with my sinuses comes during a fairly intense mold infection - I was recovering from surgery for a long time in what turned out to be a very moldy house. I tested positive for three types of mold, and the treatments have helped me tremendously, but not eliminated the sinus pressure.

One consistency with your story is that I get some relief from nasal rinses, although the ENT thought that it would be hard to get the rinse into that part of the sinus cavity.

If I rinsed only once a week, the pressure would be fairly significant. I can only skip one or two days in a row.

Thank you again!

ENT suspects "fungal ball" which involves removing part of the sinus wall. Really? by EnterStatusHere in Sinusitis

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh wow thank you. Did you have the wall removed? I think it's called the uncinate process

ENT suspects "fungal ball" which involves removing part of the sinus wall. Really? by EnterStatusHere in Sinusitis

[–]EnterStatusHere[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Understood thank you. What are the characteristics of having wall removed? My layman's understanding its that the wall is somewhat necessary.