[Strawbale] Strawbale Digest, Vol 79, Issue 1

Thomas Simkevicius t_shimkus at yahoo.com
Mon Jun 11 09:36:15 CEST 2012


Hi Rob,

How do you make earth plaster to stick to Tyvek or builder's poly?

BR,

Tomas

--- On Sun, 6/10/12, strawbale-request at amper.ped.muni.cz <strawbale-request at amper.ped.muni.cz> wrote:

From: strawbale-request at amper.ped.muni.cz <strawbale-request at amper.ped.muni.cz>
Subject: Strawbale Digest, Vol 79, Issue 1
To: strawbale at amper.ped.muni.cz
Date: Sunday, June 10, 2012, 3:00 AM

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Today's Topics:

   1.  airtight plaster (Dave Howorth)
   2. Re:  airtight plaster (RT)


----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Sat, 09 Jun 2012 14:56:48 +0100
From: Dave Howorth <dave at howorth.org.uk>
To: European strawbale building discussions
    <strawbale at amper.ped.muni.cz>
Subject: [Strawbale] airtight plaster
Message-ID: <1339250208.3401.47.camel at piglet.howorth.org.uk>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"

I'm planning to build a loadbearing bale house next year. I'm currently
thinking about airtightness (I'm of the 'build tight, ventilate right'
school of thought). It doesn't seem to be an easy subject to read up
about, so I'd welcome any advice or pointers to materials about making
straw bale walls airtight.

I'm planning to use the indoor plaster as the main airtight barrier. It
will probably be clay plaster, though lime is a possible alternative. I
know a bit about tapes to use at window and ceiling junctions and so
forth. My main concern at the moment is about how to use clay plaster to
make an airtight barrier that stays airtight. So things like minimising
cracking and so on.

I'd be grateful for [links to] any information about practical
techniques and recipes, and information about any airtightness tests.

Thanks, Dave



------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Sat, 09 Jun 2012 12:26:24 -0400
From: RT <archilogic at yahoo.ca>
To: "European strawbale building discussions"
    <strawbale at amper.ped.muni.cz>,    "SB Yahoos" <sb-r-us at yahoogroups.com>
Subject: Re: [Strawbale] airtight plaster
Message-ID: <op.wfm9aakh0ciq73 at rt-acernb>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-15; format=flowed;
    delsp=yes

On Sat, 09 Jun 2012 09:56:48 -0400, Dave Howorth <dave at howorth.org.uk>  
wrote:
[snip]
> I'd welcome any advice or pointers to materials about making
> straw bale walls airtight.
>
> I'm planning to use the indoor plaster as the main airtight barrier. It
> will probably be clay plaster, though lime is a possible alternative. I
> know a bit about tapes to use at window and ceiling junctions and so
> forth. My main concern at the moment is about how to use clay plaster to
> make an airtight barrier that stays airtight. So things like minimising
> cracking and so on.

David;
This will be brief because I'm just on my way out the door.

I'd say that achieving air-tightness of the plaster is not so much about  
minimising cracking as it is controlling where the cracking occurs and  
then implementing a strategy to ensure air-tightness at those controlled  
crack locations.

That means breaking up the plaster into panels of a reasonable size so  
that shrinkage cracking within the field of the panel will be eliminated  
(assuming that the proper mix proportions will be used for the plaster and  
that proper curing of the plaster will be carried out etc.)

Anywhere where there is a control joint, including a flange behind the  
joint in the plaster (or dissimilar planes/ materials) to ensure  
continuity of the air barrier between the two (300 mm wide strip of  
builder's poly or Tyvek or sheet metal or rubbery sheet membrane etc) and  
detailing the interface as a self-locking mechanical joint rather than  
relying upon goop is an effective technique.


-- 
=== * ===
Rob Tom                    AOD257
Kanata, Ontario, Canada

< A r c h i L o g i c  at  Y a h o o  dot  c a  >
(manually winnow the chaff from my edress if you hit "reply")


------------------------------

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