With a finished attic insulation must help keep the attic areas comfortable.
Insulate attic and finsh with vents.
For this to be fully effective low vents should be installed to replace the air that is escaping.
In other words the entire vent opening doesn t count as vented space.
Building codes vary.
To meet all three goals insulating your finished attic ventilating the roof and maximizing headroom use a combination of dense batt insulation rigid foam sheeting and air chutes.
That said air resistance and interference such as vent grates reduces the area of true ventilation.
If it is and you plan to provide heating and cooling to the finished attic space you need to remove.
Ventilation the best method for ventilating any roof is to have some type of venting up high on the roof that allows for rising hot air or warm damp air to escape.
The air is then exhausted through gable or attic vents above the soffits.
Of vent for every 300 sq.
Since parts of a finished attic are usually very close to the roof insulation often blocks proper ventilation that is needed under a roof structure.
With the mb insulation program i blew in insulation to fill the cavity and added two duraflo vents to the roof area 52 14 with now 4 and a wind turbine.
That means insulating the attic floor only not the walls and having vents in the roof.
In an unfinished attic the goal of insulation is to keep the rooms below cool in summer and warm in winter.
But not all homes.
For the same reason insulation shouldn t touch the roof s underside.
I reshingle this past year and pulled out old r14 insulation and retaped as many as visually possible areas of vapour barrier leaks cuts in material etc.
In order to facilitate this exchange of warm and cool air the general rule of thumb suggests installing at least 1 sq.
Covering up the soffit vents with loose fill or batts which can happen if you stuff insulation along the eaves is a huge no no.
The airflow from the soffits to the ridge vent keeps the roof cool and prevents ice dams and the material will block that flow.
The attic floor which is the ceiling of the living space below often already is insulated.