Tim,
Not possible for anyone to quote building code for a municipality that doesn't live or work there where you live without a lot of research. I know this as I've been into building code "interpretation" my entire life. Also, any fire code for any given city/county/state is set by that districts governing council, (this will differ from city to city /county to county /and state to state).
What would be code in N.Y. would never be code down here-it just doesn't work like that-never has-never will, sorry guys! You can't simply take building code from one state and apply it to your municipality.
Reason why?
There are simply too many factors that come into play here such as permafrost / 100 year floodplain / municipality fire record and many other driving factors. Your municipality has made the code for your area due to a very good reason-
they-(the local council of building officials-made up entirely of local folks usually) know the area as well as it's reoccurring weather / chances of fire / and many other things that factor their decision on code making.
One ultimate code driving factor is here where I've been a member for many years now in the capacity of commercial building management:
http://www.nfpa.org/
Now...you can take all the info you get from the NFPA applicable code and drive down to your local county building department to find their version of the local code-only to argue with the building inspector, (my case the fire marshall as well) on their
interpretation of the code that is written for your area, (I've had two different inspectors make me do the same building process two different ways in the same county before)! Their
interpretation is the bottom line-as well as how much coffee the guy had in him-as well as how cold it was the day he arrived for the inspection-as well as how heavily the contractor "padded" the county's pockets with "donations".
Agreed on the R-11 in between the floor joists and upstairs though-I'd stuff some R-30 into it first chance I got. But first check with your local power company as well as The State of Georgia as most have some good rebates that will apply to your improvement of insulation, (if you follow their guidelines).
Hope it helps.
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Jeff
http://www.fordification.com/forum/view ... 22&t=46251
SOLD-71 F-350 dually flatbed, 302 / .030 over V-8 with a "baby"C-6, B & M truckshifter, Dana70/4.11 ratio, intermittent wipers, tilt steering, full LED lighting on the flat bed, and no stereo yet (this way I can hear the rattles to diagnose)! SOLD!
Many Ford bumps / one 76' EB / and several dents through the years.
A lot of "oddball" Ford parts collected from working on them for 34 years now!
2008 Ford Escape 4 x 4