Anyone ever built anything using "SIPS"??
#6
"Structural Insulated Panels" -- OSB/foam sandwich -- have been touted as an energy efficient way to build.

Anyone here ever used them?  

I may be building a shop soon and SIPS seem like an easy way to get a well insulated building.
"Truth is a highway leading to freedom"  --Kris Kristofferson

Wild Turkey
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(joined 10/1999)
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#7
No, but I want to. Either that or spray foam insulation.

How would you do the roof. No sense in tight walls with a poor roof.
Rocket Science is more fun when you actually have rockets. 

"The Constitution is not an instrument for the government to restrain the people, it is an instrument for the people to restrain the government." -- Patrick Henry
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#8
My concept is a box made of SIPS -- walls and ceiling sealed together. Roof support will be standard trusses designed to allow storage of excess lumber.

They also design buildings with cathedral ceilings using SIPS as the roof panels. All joints are sealed so there is no air leakage.
"Truth is a highway leading to freedom"  --Kris Kristofferson

Wild Turkey
We may see the writing on the wall, but all we do is criticize the handwriting.
(joined 10/1999)
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#9
You don't need trusses with a SIP roof. If you can stand the span, a ridge beam and panels is all you need. However, if you are looking for storage, attic trusses would be good.
Rocket Science is more fun when you actually have rockets. 

"The Constitution is not an instrument for the government to restrain the people, it is an instrument for the people to restrain the government." -- Patrick Henry
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#10
Well, they're not exactly SIPS (per the definition of having board on the inside and outside), but my house is CANO panels; R30 walls and R50 roof panels and if i were building again, i would use the panels again.   These have steel tubes instead of glueboard on the sides, and i don't need (or want)
a wrap (like tyvek).   Main intersections (corner) have exterior steel and most construction was simply self-tapping screws.  the basic shell, including the 2nd floor, went up in a day after the panels were flat-bedded to site.   we built over 25 years ago and as i told SWMBO, the cost of heating and cooling will never go down (it hasn't).

I didn't mean to kill the thread...
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