idickers
Active member
How do you folks with heated or insulated garage-shops handle humidity? It's cold up here in upstate NY, and I'm thinking of insulating my 2 1/2 car garage this summer. I currently only have siding nailed to plywood over the studs on the outside. I'm thinking of spraying a 1" layer of TigerFoam inside the bays between the studs to block cold/wind/moisture, then adding fiberglass insulation in the stud bays, followed by drywall (or magnesiacore, if I can afford it).
However, since we also park our cars, which are often encased in snow/salt/slop, I'm concerned that in the warmer shop the snow and ice will melt off the cars and raise the humidity in the garage and rust my tools. To vent the garage would defeat the purpose of insulating it, so I'm at a standstill. I do a fair bit of metalworking and welding in the shop part of the garage, and have a radiant electric heater installed in the ceiling over my work area, but I've gotta get the temp above single digit digits, and don't want to give up the winter months.
Thanks in advance,
Ian
However, since we also park our cars, which are often encased in snow/salt/slop, I'm concerned that in the warmer shop the snow and ice will melt off the cars and raise the humidity in the garage and rust my tools. To vent the garage would defeat the purpose of insulating it, so I'm at a standstill. I do a fair bit of metalworking and welding in the shop part of the garage, and have a radiant electric heater installed in the ceiling over my work area, but I've gotta get the temp above single digit digits, and don't want to give up the winter months.
Thanks in advance,
Ian