Do you have a ridge vent? If so, that crack, though not optimal is needed ( usually soffits are screened in or fabricated tin) The ridge vent will be at the peak of your roof. It allows air to flow through your soffit and up through the ridge vent replacing, refreshing and moving air constantly to avoid mold. You have no mold in your pic on the underside of your roof decking( plywood) so it appears that everything is working properly. Check above your bathroom while you're up in the attic, that can harbor mold sometimes if your soffit and vents arent working or not enough air flow is happeningMy attic has this light coming in around it in the same location. Its where the floor meets the roof. The crack or possible soffit is like 1/8 to 1/4 around the whole perimeter of the attic. Is this suppose to be here??
Take a picture of the underside of the soffit on exterior. If exposed rafter tails take a good picture of the inside corner where the rafter tails sit on wall and of the blocking in between.My attic has this light coming in around it in the same location. Its where the floor meets the roof. The crack or possible soffit is like 1/8 to 1/4 around the whole perimeter of the attic. Is this suppose to be here??
Do you have a ridge vent? If so, that crack, though not optimal is needed ( usually soffits are screened in or fabricated tin) The ridge vent will be at the peak of your roof. It allows air to flow through your soffit and up through the ridge vent replacing, refreshing and moving air constantly to avoid mold. You have no mold in your pic on the underside of your roof decking( plywood) so it appears that everything is working properly. Check above your bathroom while you're up in the attic, that can harbor mold sometimes if your soffit and vents arent working or not enough air flow is happening
Theres a few different ways for venting out air from attics. Gable, ridge, roof vents, etc. and although i know what you’re saying about the whole gable + ridge venting, none of that has anything to do with why there’s light coming through like that right there.This. Natureboy nailed it . I see alot of homes that have new roofs put on with ridge vents that were originally designed to have gable vent system but the gable vents are left unblocked which defies the way new system with ridge and soffit ventilation works. Make sure you don’t have gable vents, or don’t have a ridge vent. Should be one or the other
My bad, i wasnt really clear and was headed out the door. I agree with bam 100% that that gap probably isn't completely open to the outside and is just light bleed through coming up through the soffit. Any visible bees nest up in the attic would probably answer that question. I'd say there is a lack of insulation to the edges and no proper vent attached to the interior side of the roof decking. I stuffed my attic with insulation to the soffits and used what we call proper vent to allow air to get up by the insulation ( like the pink styrofoam on the inderside of the roof decking in bams pic below)Theres a few different ways for venting out air from attics. Gable, ridge, roof vents, etc. and although i know what you’re saying about the whole gable + ridge venting, none of that has anything to do with why there’s light coming through like that right there.
looks to me like it’s not full height blocking in between the trusses. Sometimes they don’t require sheer transfer there. But if you see all that light it better be coming through some kind of soffit vent. My guess is a continuous soffit vent.
if that gap goes right through to the exterior that’s some bullshit.
Codes can be different but ya a lot of times there’s no fire blocking
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the pink stuff
Yeah not usually good to mix the two. They fight each other..And if you do a ridge vent with soffit, you do not use gable end vents. It's one or the other. At least here in New England
just about every house built nowadays has that baffle installed before it gets rocked so the insulators don’t blow there shit right there blocking the flow of that intake venting air.My bad, i wasnt really clear and was headed out the door. I agree with bam 100% that that gap probably isn't completely open to the outside and is just light bleed through coming up through the soffit. Any visible bees nest up in the attic would probably answer that question. I'd say there is a lack of insulation to the edges and no proper vent attached to the interior side of the roof decking. I stuffed my attic with insulation to the soffits and used what we call proper vent to allow air to get up by the insulation ( like the pink styrofoam on the inderside of the roof decking in bams pic below)
I know you're a builder so if I'm repeating this stuff to you apologies, it's only cuz this is New England, not sure if you guys use it your way?
Exactly. That’s exactly what’s happening. They didn’t use the styrofoam eave blocks. It’s all light bleed from venting. What I’d be concerned with is the blown in insulation can now over time and possibly from the installation, could fall through that gap and fill your soffit box which could block the vents and shut the draw offTheres a few different ways for venting out air from attics. Gable, ridge, roof vents, etc. and although i know what you’re saying about the whole gable + ridge venting, none of that has anything to do with why there’s light coming through like that right there.
looks to me like it’s not full height blocking in between the trusses. Sometimes they don’t require sheer transfer there. But if you see all that light it better be coming through some kind of soffit vent. My guess is a continuous soffit vent.
if that gap goes right through to the exterior that’s some bullshit.
Do you have a ridge vent? If so, that crack, though not optimal is needed ( usually soffits are screened in or fabricated tin) The ridge vent will be at the peak of your roof. It allows air to flow through your soffit and up through the ridge vent replacing, refreshing and moving air constantly to avoid mold. You have no mold in your pic on the underside of your roof decking( plywood) so it appears that everything is working properly. Check above your bathroom while you're up in the attic, that can harbor mold sometimes if your soffit and vents arent working or not enough air flow is happening
thats light reflection from the soffit, i dont know where you live so im unaware of the local climate and the associated building codes. but id be concerned theres no venting between each truss. which could be fine depending on where you live.
My bad, i wasnt really clear and was headed out the door. I agree with bam 100% that that gap probably isn't completely open to the outside and is just light bleed through coming up through the soffit. Any visible bees nest up in the attic would probably answer that question. I'd say there is a lack of insulation to the edges and no proper vent attached to the interior side of the roof decking. I stuffed my attic with insulation to the soffits and used what we call proper vent to allow air to get up by the insulation ( like the pink styrofoam on the inderside of the roof decking in bams pic below)
I know you're a builder so if I'm repeating this stuff to you apologies, it's only cuz this is New England, not sure if you guys use it your way?
Thats not my attic, just the same setup (got pic from google).. I don't get bugs in my attic so I'm guessing its a soffit on the outside or whatever??? I'm not even sure I have venting in my attic. I open the windows a crack in the summer up there. I know I don't have a ridge vent up there... I got a 1 hour inspection for $300 (house is under 800 sq feet) and he never said I didn't have venting. However I have no black caps on my roof for venting and like I said no ridge vent.