Tag-Archive for » insulation «

Feb
07

Pinky is a 10 yr old, spayed, female who likes to go out at night but will tear up the soft garage door insulation around the doors to get in if I’m not there to let her back in. This also applies to any door she seeks entry to, even if she’s inside, such as the pantry door leading to the garage. She has clawed carpet under doors of rooms inside the house that she seeks to get in or out of as well. I don’t want to de-claw her and I’m at the end of my wits to redirect this behavior after applying a battery of methods which have only worked for short periods. So, if any of you has another idea, I’d be grateful.

Feb
01

I want to add a 2nd pane of glass (actually plan to use polycarbonate) on my garage door windows. Each door has two 16×40 windows, and I need to use some form of insulation kit between the panes, such as 1/4″x 1/4″ foam. I’ll need about 80 feet of this to do the perimeter of the window and also the perimeter of the plastic bezel that hold the panes in place. What would be the preferred product to use?
I am thinking of only 1/4″ thick since the 16 existing screws that hold the front an back plastic bezels together can be re-used – if I made it thicker, I’d have to replace the 1″ screws with larger ones. Will the 1/4″ space provide an adequate air space between the panes? My goal is to prevent condensation and icing on the inside pane.

Jan
26

I am replacing garage door and I am confused about r-ratings for insulation those garage doors come with. Have seen from r-6.58 to r-18. Have seen several with the r-6.58 rating and am wondering if the ones with the higher rating is overkill.

I live in Ohio and there is living space above and next to the one car garage, so I’m concerned with having it insulated as well as possible, because I don’t want to pay a lot for energy and heating. I don’t want to heat the winter.

Jan
26

My *sweet* little dogs have developed this liking for chewing on the insulation of our garage door.
I’ve heard there’s a garage door insulation kit so you could just pop out a panel and put in a new one.
Problem is, I can’t find one anywhere. I’ve been to Lowes, Home Depot and even started searching on the internet.
I heard this might be a seasonal product – anyone know where I can get it, or at least when it will be available at Lowe’s if I can’t order it online somewhere right now?

If I can’t find it, I might want to have the dogs pretend they are garage door insulation.

Thanks everyone!

Jan
07

Do you live in a place where winter is really white and cold? If you do, you probably know how much of your expensive indoor heat gets lost because of thermal exchanges that occur all over glass surface. Glass is indeed an awful thermal insulator, yet many of use love big windows, mostly if we have a house with a beautiful view. For such windows, insulated curtains are an affordable and effective solution for creating a radiant barrier that would prevent cold drafts formation inside the rooms.

Making your own thermal insulating curtains or drapes is very easy. It’s enough to double your regular curtains with an insulating lining layer. You sew the two pieces of fabric together, then hang your curtains back to the windows and add some Velcro tape on the backside of the curtains and on the walls, in order to make the three free edges of the curtain stay pressed against the wall.

This is one of the cheapest home insulation methods that can significantly improve the r-value of your windows, thus increasing your thermal comfort and decreasing your energy bills.