Ocho
Well-known member
I'm in Texas, where it will be a nice 106 in the shade today. 
I believe the OP was simply trying to make his garage cool enough to go get something without having a heat stroke. Nothing is worse than to be clean and showered and have the wife ask you to hang a picture. Just walking into the garage to get a hammer and a few nails can sweat soak your shirt.
A few things I do when I know I'll need the garage:
This time of year EVERYTHING is hot - tools, walls, even the soap in the soap bottle. We took a laser thermometer around our shop at work this week and the floor was 106, the walls were 120 on the west side, the back seat of a car sitting in the parking lot all day was 175(!).
Stay cool, y'all!

I believe the OP was simply trying to make his garage cool enough to go get something without having a heat stroke. Nothing is worse than to be clean and showered and have the wife ask you to hang a picture. Just walking into the garage to get a hammer and a few nails can sweat soak your shirt.
A few things I do when I know I'll need the garage:
- I don't pull the cars in right after I get home from work. It just brings in more heat. Sometimes I'll even leave them outside all night. This makes about as big a difference as anything.
- Leave the garage door up by about six inches and the attic stairs open to promote some ventilation.
- Use a fan while working. I have experimented with blowing the fan across my work area for an hour or two before I start, but I can't tell if it helps or not.
- Put off major projects until October. Seriously, the heat we have right now will hurt you. If you don't HAVE to be out there, don't be out there.
This time of year EVERYTHING is hot - tools, walls, even the soap in the soap bottle. We took a laser thermometer around our shop at work this week and the floor was 106, the walls were 120 on the west side, the back seat of a car sitting in the parking lot all day was 175(!).
Stay cool, y'all!



: rolleyes2 I'm betting insulated 2"x6" walls wouldn't make it cooler either, right?
Ever since I moved to Oklahoma some 20 years ago I've never understood the mentality of people here and in Texas. Where do you people get this "insulated buildings work up north but not down here" BS? Think of a refrigerator -- same concept. Insulation and thicker walls will indeed keep the heat down/reduced and will prevent the AC from working harder than it should.