by Perry525 »
Mon Aug 05, 2013 6:52 pm
You need to understand how insulation works.
If you place insulation on the outside of a home, then you have to heat the walls, the ground and the sky.
The reason is, that your heat warms the surface of the walls, your heat then moves though the whole of the wall, and passes into the ground by conduction and radiation, and into the sky by conduction.
If, on the other hand you place the insulation on the inside of the room, floor, walls and ceiling, you create a plastic insulated box, that is both heat tight and air tight.
To avoid having any heat bridges, you should glue sheets of polystyrene to the walls and then glue plasterboard to the polystyrene. The floor must be fully floating, sheets of polystyrene just laid on the floor, tightly butted, with a Oriented Strand board t&g glued floor to finish (no heat bridges). The ceiling is much the same, sheets of polystyrene below the joists, followed by plasterboard screwed to the joists.
This will keep all the water vapour that you produce inside the room. You can open the windows for ventilation, this will also allow the water vapour to escape. It is nearly always colder and drier outside than in.
Water vapour that you see outside as, dew, frost, ice will remain outside. While the sun will drive some water vapour into the walls (as they are colder) this will disappear as the walls warm.
As the building is old and without a damp proof course, the water in the ground will continue to rise inside the walls as it always has and it will continue to evaporate into the air, as it always has.