Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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Greetings all! I so miss my basement, but I am making due using the garage for my hobby. I build plastic scale models and I do a fair amount of painting so I need to plan to address the humidity and moderate the temperature in the garage. Already looking into a split AC unit but it was also recommended that the garage door be insulated. I plan to do this myself, but the question I have is has anyone else done this and does it make that much of difference. The AC salesmen I talked to said it could lower the temperature in the garage by as much as 20*. Living in MN, I know just having your car in the garage during the winter can have that much affect. Just trying to do some fact checking and look for product recommendations.
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#2
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If you install an AC unit, you should definitely insulate the garage door and the ceiling above the garage. If you don't install an AC unit, insulating the garage door or the ceiling will not help much, if any, to cool it down. There is no way that your garage will be 20 degrees cooler with just garage door insulation. Insulation only slows down heat transfer, it doesn't prevent it, unless you are conditioning the space with an air conditioner. That is why the builder doesn't insulate unconditioned spaces in the first place.
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#3
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It depends on the direction your garage door faces. A west or south/southwest exposure will generate a lot of heat in the summer. My garage door faces north, and an insulation tech talked me out of insulating the doors. He said the difference would be negligible. I did, however, have insulation added above my garage and lanai.
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#4
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I saw some garage door insulation videos on YouTube. I have West facing door, so it DOES get hot. How much it will is somewhat debatable, but I might still do it, it is easy.
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#5
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My garage door faces East, So I get the morning sun.
Another interesting point is the Attic space above the garage. We use it for a lot of seasonal storage. Mostly candles, just kidding... ![]() The other part is that we are looking at cooling the garage and controlling the humidity. Cold air falls so does insulating the attic from the garage really make that much difference? |
#6
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My metal garage door faces south, during the summer it's like a hot plate, you can feel the heat 3 feet off the door. Insulate the door with Styrofoam sheets and it will help lower the temp a few degrees.
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#7
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#8
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It definitely cools the garage...
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Most things I worry about Never happen anyway... -Tom Petty |
#9
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Your application PAINTING adds another issue apparently not mentioned by the, "salesman." If, you will be spraying solvent based paints it is highly flammable-explosive. No one reads instructions. It says flammable, use in well ventilated area. Personal story. I used to regularly walk past a guy, on my way home from work who purchased a gorgeous 1960's Jaguar. He showed me all by himself, he put up one of those opened gas heaters you used to see in stores. He apparently was spraying paint in there. He blew up his garage. The flames destroyed his gorgeous car and he was found DEAD under the car by the fire dept. |
#10
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#11
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I picked up about 15 degrees. I did the door and the crawl space above the ceiling.
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#12
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Ours faces north. We did insulate and marginal results..we're from Detroit Lakes!
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#13
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We insulated our garage door and noticed a big difference! our gatage doesn’t get nearly as hot as it used to during the hot summer days.
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#14
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#15
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I installed reflective foam core garage door insulation and am VERY SATISFIED with the results. (Stuff I used is here: Double Garage Door Kit – US Energy Products)
My garage doors (3 car garage) are chocolate brown and face east. They catch all of the morning sun, and until I installed insulation radiated inward like pizza ovens. I took careful temperature measurements for several hot summer days before installing and several more hot summer days after installing the insulation. Temperatures of the inside surfaces of the doors lowered dramatically, easily the 20 degrees mentioned in other posts, and on a few days up to 50 degrees different. HOWEVER, surface temperature of the doors isn't what you're living with when working in the garage. It's the air temperature that's important. So... Before installing, the air temperature inside the garage would become 7 to 10 degrees above outside air temperature. Afterwards, inside air temperature remained 4 to 6 degrees below outside air temperature. In short, the insulation made noticeable reduction in the pizza oven radiant effect, not 20 degrees, but certainly cooler than the surrounding outside air temperature. If you're also going to use a mini-split, the insulation will save it some work.
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Gratitude! The daily practice of finding at least 3 things to be grateful about makes for a happier life. |
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