AirCooledTiger
Member
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2015
- Messages
- 19
Hi, folks -
Been a member for a while and learned quite a bit from this forum.
I'm looking for some advice on how to address the miserable heat/humidity in my garage. I enjoy working on my cars and it is just miserable in July and August.
It's a basic 2-door, 2-car garage in the Atlanta area. Approximately 420 sq ft. 11' ceilings. Garage faces 9º N. There is a half-glass man door to the outside and a window -- both on the east side. There is a good bit of morning shade. North side is brick. East side is hardie board siding. Second story above garage is heated/cooled.
All the lighting in the garage is LED but I do have a refrigerator (the beer fridge) that is a heat source. Of course if the cars have been driven and parked they will be heat sources as well.
I took some measurements yesterday. The outside high was 88ºF and the low was 74ºF. Over that 24 hour period the high in the garage was 88º and the low was 81º. The high humidity was 65% and the low was 53%.
A couple of years ago I replaced the garage doors. The new ones seem to be much better insulated than the old ones -- I suspect they might be contributing to trapping heat inside. Last night when the low was 74º outside the outside face of the garage door was also 74º. The ambient air temp in the garage at the same time was 88º and the inside of the garage door was also 88º -- a 14º temp difference!
Even with the doors up in the evening and fans running it seems that the garage just stays heat soaked. I don't think I really understand which factors are contributing the most to the heat soak though.
Option 1: Window film
I've thought about having 3M Crystalline film applied to the glass in the garage. That would help reduce UV heat from coming in but I'm not sure how much that is really contributing to my problem.
Option 2: Vents & Suction Fans
I've seen where some people install suction vents & fans. I was thinking if I could install vents in one end and a wall mounted suction fan on the other that would help pull air through the garage.
Option 3: Split A/C or heat pump
I don't think I can get away with a window A/C unit. Wife and HoA would likely disapprove and plus the window is ground level so it might be a security risk. I might be able to install a window unit on the back wall though.
I've also looked at things like the Mr Cool DIY. That seems more do-able.
My question is with wife and kids coming/going all the time, won't I lose a lot of cooling from this type of approach with the garage door going up & down?
The pro of a heat pump type unit would be that it would make the garage more comfortable in some of the winter months.
Obviously the extra benefit of an A/C unit will be reducing humidity as well.
I have a sub-panel in the garage with a 30A breaker that could support either 110 or 220. My plan was to save it for a lift or air compressor one day. Maybe I could figure out a way to switch it where only one thing was active at a time.
Option 4: Dehumidifier
This might help in the summer months just to knock down the humidity.
Any other ideas? How are some of you solving this problem?
Opinions on which approach(es) will be the most effective bang for the buck?
I'd really appreciate any/all feedback.
Been a member for a while and learned quite a bit from this forum.
I'm looking for some advice on how to address the miserable heat/humidity in my garage. I enjoy working on my cars and it is just miserable in July and August.
It's a basic 2-door, 2-car garage in the Atlanta area. Approximately 420 sq ft. 11' ceilings. Garage faces 9º N. There is a half-glass man door to the outside and a window -- both on the east side. There is a good bit of morning shade. North side is brick. East side is hardie board siding. Second story above garage is heated/cooled.
All the lighting in the garage is LED but I do have a refrigerator (the beer fridge) that is a heat source. Of course if the cars have been driven and parked they will be heat sources as well.
I took some measurements yesterday. The outside high was 88ºF and the low was 74ºF. Over that 24 hour period the high in the garage was 88º and the low was 81º. The high humidity was 65% and the low was 53%.
A couple of years ago I replaced the garage doors. The new ones seem to be much better insulated than the old ones -- I suspect they might be contributing to trapping heat inside. Last night when the low was 74º outside the outside face of the garage door was also 74º. The ambient air temp in the garage at the same time was 88º and the inside of the garage door was also 88º -- a 14º temp difference!
Even with the doors up in the evening and fans running it seems that the garage just stays heat soaked. I don't think I really understand which factors are contributing the most to the heat soak though.
Option 1: Window film
I've thought about having 3M Crystalline film applied to the glass in the garage. That would help reduce UV heat from coming in but I'm not sure how much that is really contributing to my problem.
Option 2: Vents & Suction Fans
I've seen where some people install suction vents & fans. I was thinking if I could install vents in one end and a wall mounted suction fan on the other that would help pull air through the garage.
Option 3: Split A/C or heat pump
I don't think I can get away with a window A/C unit. Wife and HoA would likely disapprove and plus the window is ground level so it might be a security risk. I might be able to install a window unit on the back wall though.
I've also looked at things like the Mr Cool DIY. That seems more do-able.
My question is with wife and kids coming/going all the time, won't I lose a lot of cooling from this type of approach with the garage door going up & down?
The pro of a heat pump type unit would be that it would make the garage more comfortable in some of the winter months.
Obviously the extra benefit of an A/C unit will be reducing humidity as well.
I have a sub-panel in the garage with a 30A breaker that could support either 110 or 220. My plan was to save it for a lift or air compressor one day. Maybe I could figure out a way to switch it where only one thing was active at a time.
Option 4: Dehumidifier
This might help in the summer months just to knock down the humidity.
Any other ideas? How are some of you solving this problem?
Opinions on which approach(es) will be the most effective bang for the buck?
I'd really appreciate any/all feedback.
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