When I walk through the hardware store, it is usually the bright
pink fiberglass insulation that catches my eye.
Homeowners eager for green ways to keep their houses cool in the summer and warm in the winter may soon have an alternative to
the pink fiberglass insulation they have used for decades.
Not exact matches
When you hear the word
insulation, rolls of that
pink fiberglass stuff is usually what springs to mind in most people's heads.
According to Consumers Report your attic should have 11 inches of
fiberglass (ie:
pink insulation) or rock wool (ie: Roxul) or 8 inches of cellulose (ie: blown
insulation), at the very least.
It is non-toxic, non-irritating (think
fiberglass), does not off - gas, will not burn until it reaches 1200 degrees fahrenheit and when it does, it does not give off toxic cyanide gas like the commonly used
pink board
insulation.
For example, other trademarked colours include Owen Corning's
pink (panther) colour for
fiberglass insulation (See In Re Owens - Corning Fiberglass Corp., 774 F. 2d
fiberglass insulation (See In Re Owens - Corning
Fiberglass Corp., 774 F. 2d
Fiberglass Corp., 774 F. 2d 1116 (Fed.