brightspark
Member
- Messages
- 40,968
- Location
- yarm stockton on tees
worked in loads of attics filled with that stuff. just get well covered up with all the gear as in earlier post i put
worked in loads of attics filled with that stuff. just get well covered up with all the gear as in earlier post i put
It’s insulation. Why remove it?
I vacuumed out the old vermiculite insulation where I was working in my eaves as I had to install 16 new 7x2 joists but left it in place everywhere else as it's nasty stuff! Mostly insulated up there now except the bit over my bedroom ceiling.
I did have it tested though!
That's what happened in our place .. was annoyed to find two thickness of plasterboard nailed tothe sides of several roof trusses and the ceiling boards nailed into that ..they did the same trick to try and get a straight line on the slightly different sized factory made roof trusses . Once I'd raked most of the big stuff up and bagged it I used an industrial vacuum with a 20 mtr reinforced bit of 50 mm iD pond water hose to suck the dust & other crud out the roof void then repaired where Mr Nearly had hole-sawed through several trusses when he tried to put in recessed halogen lighting through out the bungalow , he didn't use any heat /vent cones so most of the wiring adjacent to the light fittings was well & truly cooked ..... baked almost to burning point. It also gave me the opportunity to put in timed extractors & low volt light uiits above the bath & shower area as well as a decent extractor hood piping in the kitchen to the outside .In an ideal world I'd remove all the insulation, clean up and treat all the timber up there.
Spread it over your gardens and turn it in before it blows away .I hate vermiculite.
Its lovely job - rolling up all the insulation, crawling around with a pump sprayer trying to get all surfaces, especially those with holes in, and little piles of sawdust underneath.In an ideal world I'd remove all the insulation, clean up and treat all the timber up there.