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#1
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As some of you know, our hangar building was rammed by a semi-truck
this past August, during the repaving of our taxiway. Fairly extensive damage was done to one corner of the building, but we were able to keep the plane inside, thanks to the guy only hitting our "kitchen" area. (No beer was harmed, thankfully!) The airport maintenane guy put a tarp over the car-sized hole, and thus it remained -- until this week. We were out of the hangar for four days, while they replaced a major steel girder, and a bunch of sheet metal. So, today we moved back in. To facilitate repairs, we had moved EVERYTHING out of the kitchen corner, which meant our counters, microwave(s), refrigerators, and a screened in tent (which we put inside the corner of the hangar not to keep bugs out, but to keep heat IN) -- along with, of course, the airplane. (Which we got to store in our historic Boeing/United Hangar, which was built in 1929 for the airmail service. Man, if those walls could only talk...) When we moved into our hangar six years ago, we attached high density styrofoam sheets sheets (commonly known as "R" board) to some of the sheet metal walls. We used caulk-gun construction adhesive to hold the 4' x 8' boards to the sheet metal, which has worked great. Initially we did this not for insulation value, but to have a surface to which we could staple photographs, maps, and the like. We discovered that it was simply not possible to tape photos to the sheet metal walls, since the cold and heat would eventually degrade the paper and tape -- but the R-board worked great. It also (naturally) made the hangar warmer. However, it's fairly pricey stuff, and we ended up only insulating about 25% of the walls. We also used the "Great Stuff" expandable aerosol foam stuff to fill ALL cracks and voids in the hangar, to help keep the wind and snow out, but also (more importantly) to keep the birds and bugs out. It has worked great for this purpose. (Although you can see where birds have pecked their way through it, in spots.) And that's the way everything sat, until today. As long as the whole hangar was ripped apart, Mary and I took the opportunity to buy half a dozen more sheets of the R board, a few more cans of Great Stuff, and got to work. Cutting the stuff to fit the angled roof line was a bit tricky, but otherwise it's a simple "measure, cut, and glue" process that goes pretty quickly. Our two most exposed walls are now fully insulated (giving us several more years of photograph-pin-up room!) and tightly sealed with Great Stuff. You could almost instantly feel the place get less drafty, although until I do something about the thin tin ceiling (which has a roof ridge vent for ventilation) it will never be really *warm*. (That's why we bought the tent. When you stick a torpedo heater into the tent, the tent roof keeps the heat down closer to you. Without it, the heat just instantly dissipates.) Can anyone think of ANY way to insulate the ceiling/roof? The vent was put in because (according to the gray heads on the field) moisture used to build up so badly inside the unventilated tin box that airplanes would be wet from condensation. What do you guys do to keep your hangar warm, animal and snow free? -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#2
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What do you guys do to keep your hangar warm, animal and snow free?
Just one thing: I live in Arizona. It works amazingly well ! --- Ken Reed M20M, N9124X -- Ken Reed M20M, N9124X |
#3
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What do you guys do to keep your hangar warm, animal and snow free?
Just one thing: I live in Arizona. It works amazingly well ! And...you save on electricity costs by using it as an oven in summer! :-) -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#4
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Jay Honeck wrote:
What do you guys do to keep your hangar warm, animal and snow free? Just one thing: I live in Arizona. It works amazingly well ! And...you save on electricity costs by using it as an oven in summer! Not only that, but it's a convenient way to make breakfast in the morning -- just pop the eggs, toast and (pick your fave meat product) on either a nice, clean corner of the floor or on the wing in the sun. |
#5
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Ken Reed wrote:
What do you guys do to keep your hangar warm, animal and snow free? Just one thing: I live in Arizona. It works amazingly well ! --- Ken Reed M20M, N9124X Oh, that's rough! -- Regards, Ross C-172F 180HP KSWI |
#6
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Ken Reed wrote:
Just one thing: Rats, you beat me to this type of response...just posted the California version :-) -- Jack Allison PP-ASEL-Instrument Airplane "To become a Jedi knight, you must master a single force. To become a private pilot you must strive to master four of them" - Rod Machado (Remove the obvious from address to reply via e-mail) |
#7
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Larger version of "Great Stuff". When we renovate our potato storage
warehouses, we have custom applicators come in and spray 3"-5" on the interior walls and ceiling. Any openings such as a ridge cap are "boxed out" and left open. Jim |
#8
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("Jim Burns" wrote)
Larger version of "Great Stuff". When we renovate our potato storage warehouses, we have custom applicators come in and spray 3"-5" on the interior walls and ceiling. Any openings such as a ridge cap are "boxed out" and left open. Cost? ....for the larger version of "Great Stuff"? My thought was "insulation netting" with wire run up and twist-tied to anything available, then blow in some ...(wait for it) ...old newspapers into the new attic space you've created. That blown in stuff is cheap - around here they (give) you the blower, free! "Hey Joe." 40x30 = 1,200 sq-ft Yours = 1,000 sq-ft (?) Montblack-in-the-saddle-again |
#9
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An old parachute as a 'ceiling' under the steel roof... It will slow
the rising warm air from instantly exiting the ridge vent yet allow moisture exchange... denny |
#10
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An old parachute as a 'ceiling' under the steel roof... It will slow
the rising warm air from instantly exiting the ridge vent yet allow moisture exchange... Good idea! Any idea where I can get old parachutes anymore? When I was a kid, the old "Army Surplus" store had dozens of 'em. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
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