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Air Tighten with Care
A misunderstanding has apparently occurred over
one of my statements in "Moisture and Mobile Home Weatherization"
(HE July/Aug '95, p. 29). I mentioned that many weatherization measures
will make the house more airtight, and that could cause moisture problems.
I gave as an example the use of dense-pack cellulose wall insulation; however
I did not mean to imply that it should not be installed. I am strongly
in favor of the use of dense-pack cellulose in walls because it does a
good job of insulation and also reduces unwanted air leakage. It is because
it typically does such an exceptional job of reducing air leakage that
it must be used with care. Whenever any air sealing measures are installed,
a procedure should be followed to assure health and safety, including:
(1) a SunPower or COAD-type combustion safety testing protocol, (2) source
control strategies for excess moisture and other pollutants, (3) installed
mechanical ventilation capacity whenever the measured cfm50 is near or
below the building tightness limit or there are high levels of contaminants.
In no case should any weatherization involving direct or indirect air tightening
be undertaken in those few older mobile homes with an exterior vapor retarder
until remedial actions are taken.
George Tsongas
Portland, OR
Closet Reasons to Install CFLs
I discovered an unexpected justification for
use of compact fluorescent lights, which turns conventional wisdom about
where CFLs are and are not justified on its head. Recently we sought to
install a light fixture in a closet. The electrician informed us that the
building code (National Electric Code) forbids the installation of an incandescant
light fixture less than 18 inches from a shelf, which was the situation
in our closet (and probably in most other closets). To meet code, we would
have had to reset the fixture into the plaster ceiling at great cost. However,
a compact fluorescent light is acceptable because its heat production is
within the safe limits. Here is a case where energy efficiency reduces
first costs, even when overall energy savings are small.
David Goldstein
San Francisco, CA
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