by Jerry Peck - Codeman on Wed Feb 15, 2012 9:16 am
The exhausts can be vented out anywhere convenient, such as through a gable end, through the roof on the rear faces where they are not seen, etc., but not into the soffit area either. There really is no reason to have the exhaust discharge at the front, and although many contractors go for the shortest and cheapest way, as the buyer you can tell them differently - they may say that there is an extra cost, which would be up to you to accept or not.
"So basically I should just spray in the rafter and not vent it (cold roof). This is the way the rest of the home is being done?" Correct.
(bold and underlining are mine)
- R806.4 Conditioned attic assemblies. Unvented conditioned attic assemblies (spaces between the ceiling joists of the top story and the roof rafters) are permitted under the following conditions:
- - 1. No interior vapor retarders are installed on the ceiling side (attic floor) of the unvented attic assembly.
- - 2. An air-impermeable insulation is applied in direct contact to the underside/interior of the structural roof deck. “Air-impermeable” shall be defined by ASTM E 283.
- - - Exception: In Zones 2B and 3B, insulation is not required to be air impermeable.
- - 3. In the warm humid locations as defined in Section N1101.2.1:
- - - 3.1. For asphalt roofing shingles: A 1-perm (5.7 × 10-11 kg/s ⋅ m2 ⋅ Pa) or less vapor retarder (determined using Procedure B of ASTM E 96) is placed to the exterior of the structural roof deck; that is, just above the roof structural sheathing.
- - - 3.2. For wood shingles and shakes: a minimum continuous 1/4-inch (6 mm) vented air space separates the shingles/shakes and the roofing felt placed over the structural sheathing.
- - 4. In Zones 3 through 8 as defined in Section N1101.2, sufficient insulation is installed to maintain the monthly average temperature of the condensing surface above 45°F (7°C). The condensing surface is defined as either the structural roof deck or the interior surface of an air-impermeable insulation applied in direct contact with the underside/interior of the structural roof deck. “Air-impermeable” is quantitatively defined by ASTM E 283. For calculation purposes, an interior temperature of 68°F (20°C) is assumed. The exterior temperature is assumed to be the monthly average outside temperature.
Fiberglass insulation is not An air-impermeable.
Note that the exception: Exception: In Zones 2B and 3B, insulation is not required to be air impermeable. addresses the following areas only:
- 2B includes the southern tip of Texas roughly souht of, and to the west of, San Antonio, and, Arizona south of Phoenix
- 3B includes an area around where Nevada, Utah, and Arizona meet, and, roughly the center third of California south of Redding, and widening to the east roughly at Bakersfield
If you are outside that area, the exception does not apply.
Jerry Peck - CodeMan
AskCodeMan.com
Construction Litigation Consultant - Retired
Construction and Code Consultant - Semi Retired