I've recently moved into a bungalow, with an attic conversion, there's a little mineral wool scattered among the ceiling joists (of the ground floor) but nothing on the pitched roof.
I'd like to put in kingspan (or similar) to improve insulation but, having done the job of friction fitting the kingspan to the pitched roof in a previous house (it was a nightmare job), I'm wondering if I'm better to kingspan between the joists (I.e. The ceilings of the ground floor), rather than the pitched part? I could then insulate the smaller pitched part of the roof, that sits above the attic room.
It seems to me that this way, we're preventing the heat from travelling through the ground floor ceilings and heating the eaves (which would essentially be heating a 'dead zone')?
I'd like to put in kingspan (or similar) to improve insulation but, having done the job of friction fitting the kingspan to the pitched roof in a previous house (it was a nightmare job), I'm wondering if I'm better to kingspan between the joists (I.e. The ceilings of the ground floor), rather than the pitched part? I could then insulate the smaller pitched part of the roof, that sits above the attic room.
It seems to me that this way, we're preventing the heat from travelling through the ground floor ceilings and heating the eaves (which would essentially be heating a 'dead zone')?