Ken, what did you do with the cavity? Presumably filled it also. But if the cavity was already filled, have you got any ideas about how best to ensure that there are no gaps in the existing cavity insulation? Many cavity wall insulation jobs are less than brilliant because the material has sunk or got caught be excess mortar in the cavity.kenneal wrote:I've had three external insulation jobs done recently and two of those have been on cavity walled houses. The third is on a house with cavities at ground level and solid at first floor. The only completely solid wall house I have done was back in the early 80's and that was on brick.
There have been no problems with any of them.
I am facing this in our renovation. The 50mm cavity had mineral fibre of some kind blown in and I suspect that it is pretty patchy. Both leaves of the wall are made of dense concrete block and we want to externally insulate with a further 300mm of - unfortunately - EPS (I would have loved to have used a more natural product but this is the more practical solution. If there is significant air movement in the cavity this will compromise the effectiveness of our external insulation.
We will be removing the roof of the property during the renovation and will have access from the top of the cavity while the roof is off. Given that we have mineral fibre in our cavity it is more likely to have snagged on excess cement rather than sagged, so I'm not sure what is best to do, other than stuffing it down further from the top and adding to it. Maybe we could also inject more insulation material of some kind lower down the wall?
Any thoughts?