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The Work of Art and The Art of Work Kiko Denzer on Art |
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[Cob] Soundproofing , condos, being burnt outAmanda Peck ap615 at hotmail.comThu Feb 19 08:01:46 CST 2004
Rumor hath it that straw bales don't burn very readily--as long as they are intact--because they are packed tightly enough that there isn't much oxygen in them. This might well NOT be true of smaller, thinner packages of straw. Some kind of made-for-the purpose sound-deadening sound control surface probably would work best. We've all seen egg-crate walls. But they're a "gotta be careful AND hope a fire doesn't break out somewhere else in the building." I wonder what kind of a wall there is in that condo. Should--for both noise and fire prevention--be double, with insulation, but goodness knows the builders skimped on as much as possible in new buildings, and who knows what happened in remodeling for condos. (The one set of condo's I actually worked on had the wonderful design of nice big water heaters in the attic, either no stairs or flimsy "attic stairs". Hey, it gave them the most square feet) Wax-soaked anything would give me the willies--candle wicks on the ceiling, only deterrent to fire is lack of oxygen. Burlap glued on as wallpaper makes fire marshalls nervous. "sleeping in PJ's" Yes. the time I WAS burnt out of a house I had on holstein-patterned flannel PJ's. Better than some of my other possibilities. ...................... Elizabeth writes: Wouldn't this replace the "built-to-code" non-flammable insulation with something not-to-code and flammable? Might not be a good idea in a building occupied by other owners. Even tightly packed straw bricks will burn much faster and hotter and fiberglass insulation. I would make the same point re the idea of using wax-soaked burlap to cover drafty gaps between rafters, mentioned in another thread. This sounds like an extremely flammable material. My sister once lived in a stone dormitory at a women's college--the shell of the building was stone, but all the interior walls were insulated with 1920s newspapers. The fire department estimated the building had a fire life of (if I remember correctly) 30 seconds. That is, once a single room was completely involved in flames, the fire would flash through the newspaper stuffed walls and engulf the entire building in 30 seconds. They took fire drills very seriously. A girl who chose to sleep in the buff would be expected to run naked down the stairs and onto the lawn at 2 a.m. My sister decided PJs were a good idea. _________________________________________________________________ Say good-bye to spam, viruses and pop-ups with MSN Premium -- free trial offer! http://click.atdmt.com/AVE/go/onm00200359ave/direct/01/
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