EddieWalker
Epic Contributor
Venting is to create air flow through your rafters. It pulls air from the lowest spot, your eaves, and exits it out the highest spot, your peak. Or as close to the peak as possible. From what I understand in your situation, there isn't any air flow through this area.
I think you have to either create a path for air to flow through there, or pack it full of foam so there isn't enough air in there to create so much water.
Condensation happens all the time, in all parts of the house. Most of it is never noticed or an issue. It gets blamed for all sorts of silly things, but all thats happening is the air cannot hold the water vapor in it any more due to the lowering of temperature. The colder that air gets, the higher the relative humidity gets, until you hit 100 percent. In most cases, this happens in a very small space from traped air, or air next to a source that is colder then the surrounding areas. Soda cans are a good example when they are really cold and the air is a lot warmer. Metal holds its temperature longer then wood or other materials on a house, so it's always the first and most obvious place to have condensation.
Remember, you have to have an eave vent and a ridge vent. Air has to go from one place to another. You don't have to have a certain number of vents, they just have to be in such a place that you get that air movement over everything.
Hope that made sense,
Eddie
I think you have to either create a path for air to flow through there, or pack it full of foam so there isn't enough air in there to create so much water.
Condensation happens all the time, in all parts of the house. Most of it is never noticed or an issue. It gets blamed for all sorts of silly things, but all thats happening is the air cannot hold the water vapor in it any more due to the lowering of temperature. The colder that air gets, the higher the relative humidity gets, until you hit 100 percent. In most cases, this happens in a very small space from traped air, or air next to a source that is colder then the surrounding areas. Soda cans are a good example when they are really cold and the air is a lot warmer. Metal holds its temperature longer then wood or other materials on a house, so it's always the first and most obvious place to have condensation.
Remember, you have to have an eave vent and a ridge vent. Air has to go from one place to another. You don't have to have a certain number of vents, they just have to be in such a place that you get that air movement over everything.
Hope that made sense,
Eddie