It s the closest point to the ground.
How to access attic in mobile home.
Manufactured houses do not usually have attic access because of the limited space between the ceiling and roof.
Of the attic altogether by sealing the attic from the outdoors.
Fortunately manufactured home builders have gotten a lot better after the hud code regulations began and of course there have been significant advances in mobile home insulation.
Furthermore complex ceiling designs in new homes make air sealing between the attic cavity and living space more difficult.
And resulting incomplete attic air barriers often allow humid air to contact cooled surfaces potentially causing moisture related problems.
Attic access often the attic access is left uninsulated to keep insulation from falling into the home.
But most mobile homes do not have enough height in that space for someone to actually climb in and move around or store something which is necessary for most people to call it an attic and not just a gap above the ceiling.
Many mobile homes built before 1976 only have between 1 and 4 inches of poor quality insulation if they have any at all.
Most mobile homes do not have attic access.
Blown away any amount of wind entering the attic through vents or gaps can blow the very light insulation away.
The roof trusses create an enclosed space between the ceiling and the roof that can be defined as an attic.
This is due to the fact that most mobile homes have very little space between the ceiling and roofing so the manufacturers figure why bother with it.
Opening the ceiling to gain access is not a difficult process.
Even if the insulation was installed many builders left voids and gaps throughout the home.
Damaged insulation in the underbelly.
A lot goes down at your homes underbelly.