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Re: [Strawbale] Air tightness and earth plastering



I haven't seen any tests of the air-tightness of very thin or unfinished earthen plaster/render*. Nor am I worried about it. Testing any component of a building in an improper or unfinished state is likely to show poor results. On the other hand, I have seen enough tests of plastered strawbale houses to have complete confidence in the air barrier capabilities of earthen and other plasters.

Lots of strawbale buildings do poorly in blower door tests, and the problem is not air leaking through the plaster, but through cracks between the plaster and other elements of the building. Tiny cracks at the top and bottom of the walls, at doors and windows, and in the other places Andrew lists below all add up to lots of air leakage, relative to the standards that we are aiming for.

Most plaster of whatever material forms cracks as the layer cures. A single layer is likely to have a lot of small cracks, cracks which are perhaps hard to see, but which will allow more air movement than the much larger area of plaster between the cracks. In other words, it is not the plaster that is leaking air, it is the cracks in the plaster. One reason for plastering in three layers is to avoid having cracks that extend through the full thickness of the plaster/render.

Derelict

*In my reading and experience, the use of terms like "plaster", "render", and even "stucco" vary widely between regions and individuals. I haven't seen the consistency that Paul indicated.

Derek Roff
Language Learning Center
Ortega Hall 129, MSC03-2100
University of New Mexico
Albuquerque, NM 87131-0001
505/277-7368, fax 505/277-3885
Internet: derek@unm...




--On Wednesday, April 20, 2011 2:25 PM -0700 Andrew Morrison <Andrew@StrawBale...> wrote:

Hi Sebastien. One thing for certain is that without a thick layer of render, preferably three coats, the blower door test is not likely to be successful. There is too much ability for air to move through the wall until the tender is complete and the tightness details at the floor/wall and wall/ceiling intersections has been installed. In addition, you'll want to make sure that your wall penetrations (plugs, plumbing lines if any, and other such areas) are well sealed. That's all for now as I'm writing on my phone's tiny screen.

:)

Andrew

www.StrawBale.com

Sent from my iPhone. Sorry about any typos or "auto words" that might be wrong.

On Apr 20, 2011, at 1:52 PM, Sebastien Hubert <sebastien.hubert@mc2000...> wrote:

Hello everybody,

Till yesterday I was pretty confident that it was possible to make
a good air tightness using earth plastering. Yesterday an other professional called me regarding air tightness. His neighbor and him did a blowerdoor test to verify the airtightness of their 2 passive houses (should be passive). The result was not good. The n50 leakage rate is supposed to be smaller than 0.6. The building must not leak more air than 0.6 times the house volume per hour (n50 ? 0.6 / hour) at 50Pa (N/m?) as tested by a blower door.

He obtained n50 = 1.2 and it was 0.95 for the second one. They
worked 2 days trying to find what could be the problem and didn't find any major leakage. There was 1 point that could be a problem. A basement wall that is part of the living space get only 1 layer of earth plastering but no render. The thickness is more or less 1.5cm. They decided to glue a airtightness sheet (1 square meter) on this wall. They blew the air outside of the building. Then they saw the sheet (that has been glued) inflating meaning that the earth plastering was not airtight.

Of course, I have to say that it would be better to put the render
on this wall.  Airtightness should be probably better.

I'm building a straw bale (this is our house) and we really want a
good airtightness. For the wall, the earth plastering is supposed to do the airtightness. We are going to make a blower door test before finishing the details. This means the renders are not ready yet because we will put the last earth layer on the wall and ceiling at the same moment. This will be done after the blowerdoor test. This means that the blower door test will perhaps not be successful.

What do you think about it ?

Does anybody already make a blowerdoor test with earth plastering
airtightness ?

I would really appreciate a feedback.

Many thanks

Cheers

Sebastien