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Air Tightness of SIPs
National Tests Verify R-Control SIPs
Outperform Conventional Framing
An R-Control SIP test room significantly outperformed a
2x6 stick-framed and fiberglass-insulated room in testing
under identical laboratory conditions at Oak Ridge National
Laboratories (ORNL). Results from a carefully monitored and
instrumented study in ORNL’s climate simulation laboratory
showed that R-Control SIP construction is more energy efficient
and far more airtight than stick-frame construction.
ORNL Testing Method
The ORNL test setup created identical climate conditions and
measured the airtightness and the heating energy requirement
of the two rooms. ORNL testing demonstrated that R-Control
SIP connections created a structure which was virtually air tight.
This contrasted to stick built walls which had considerable air
leakage. Dramatically reducing air infiltration provides a more
comfortable interior environment, an advantage in building with
R-Control SIPs.
Blower Door Testing
The room with 4 1/2-inch SIP walls, a SIP ceiling, a window, a
door, pre-routed wiring chases, and electrical outlets showed
90% less air leakage than an otherwise identical room built with
2x6 studs, OSB sheathing, fiberglass insulation, and drywall. At
50 pascals of negative pressure, the stick-built room leaked 126
cubic feet of air per minute (CFM), while the R-Control SIP room
loss was a mere 9 CFM.