HOW TO MAKE AND INSTALL YOUR OWN INSULATION...FOR 5? OR LESS A SQUARE FOOT!
(Page 3 of 5)
Yep. Cellulose fiber. Which is nothing but old newspapers,
cardboard boxes, and other kinds of waste paper ... ground
up fine ... and treated with some readily available and
inexpensive chemicals to make it self- extinguishing and
verminproof.
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It's hard to think of a more readily available, a simpler,
or a less costly insulation ... yet the "R" factor (the
higher the "R", the better) of each inch of
cellulose fiber is a very respectable 4. Even when you buy
it ready-made, then, this is an extremely costeffective
insulation. And when you make it yourself your savings can
really skyrocket!
That " makin' " is not in the least complicated either. as
MOTHER's researchers recently proved to themselves. It
mainly consists of [1] gathering together enough bone-dry
scrap cardboard or old newspapers, [2] running them through
a farm-type haMmermill set for its finest possible grind,
[3] mixing in—either before or after the cellulose is
groundenough fireproofing and vermin repellent to protect
it, and [4] putting the finished insulation where you want
it.
USE A FARM-TYPE HAMMERMILL
The only "complication" we've found about this whole
do-it-yourself project is that nothing less than a real,
live, genuine hammermill will handle the grinding of the
cellulose the way it should be handled. Little garden
mulcher-type "shredder grinders" simply won't chew either
paper or cardboard into the fluffy, fuzzy mass of fibers
that makes the best insulation. (Rule of thumb: If you can
still read whole words on your ground newsprint, it wasn't
ground finely enough.)
What you want to do then (if you don't already have one) is
rent or borrow or barter some time on one of the
feed-grinding hammermills that many farmers own (the units
are very much like the leaf grinders and limb shredders
that you frequently see utility line crews using alongside
the road).
Take care, too, to see that all the paper and cardboard you
feed through the grinder is bone dry and stays that way
(moisture can cause the shredded cellulose to "compost").
And always wear a respirator mask to protect your lungs
from both paper dust and fine chemical particles as you
work.
That last caution, by the way, is by no means meant to
suggest that the chemicals used to treat the cellulose are
in any way highly dangerous. Boric acid, the fire retardant
used by most manufacturers of this insulation, is—as
you probably know—so mild that doctors have
frequently prescribed it as an eyewash. This particular
fireproofer is now in such short supply, however (because
of the current tremendous demand for insulation), that
MOTHER's research crew has tested and presently recommends
fireproofing cellulose insulation with borax. And borax, as
you're surely aware, is so safe that it's the major
ingredient in some laundry soaps.
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