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Strategies & Market Trends : Booms, Busts, and Recoveries

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To: alanrs who wrote (69849)6/29/2008 8:44:41 PM
From: Snowshoe  Read Replies (1) of 74559
 
I lived in an old house like that as a very young child, and I remember my father going down to the basement to shovel coal into the furnace. Soon we built a modern 1950s house with an oil-burning furnace. Then natural gas came to the neighborhood, and it was fun for us kids to watch the welders connecting pipes in the trenches. So we built a modern 1960s house heated by gas, but my mother would not part with her tried and true electric kitchen range.

Now I'm back in a 1950s house, but I want to bring the insulation up to modern super-insulated condition. My neighbor around the block is remodeling his, so it's a good chance to see how these old houses are put together. I figure I'll add 4 inches of foam board on the outside. Inside I may add some staggered studs to increase the wall thickness from 4 inches to 6 inches. That would give me a total of 10 inches. Mq can live in an igloo if he wants to, but I want to be reasonably warm (at least 60 degrees F).
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