duluthUPLAND
Member
Checking in after my garage build out last summer with a report on my heating and insulation performance. I had made some inquires about mini splits and spray foam on the forum and got a lot of great information from people so I'm sharing this in hopes that it may help someone else.
My garage is 24x24, located in Duluth, MN.
I opted to go with spray foam and paid for 2.5" on walls and 3" on the ceiling. As others had suggested I might, I feel I got more than I paid for. More like 3"+ on the walls and 3.5"+ on the rafters. I do not have a ceiling in, so it's just open rafters.
There's a 16 foot heavy wood garage door. I was looking at replacing it but thought I would wait and see through the first winter. I did have someone come out and look at it and he said it might do just fine, he said sometimes these doors even have styrofoam in the panels... not sure about that.
For heat, I purchased this two-ton cold climate mini split from Senville which has rated heating performance down to -22. I bought the vacuum pump and additional tools to install this myself and successfully complete the job, which is a miracle in itself, seriously.
Heating capability was a huge question mark for me and we'd had a pretty mild winter up until the past week. About November I set the mini split to 69 in the garage and it's been there ever since. We've been subzero here for over a week straight now and definitely below -22 overnight and I can happily report the Senville mini split, has not wavered. It continues to heat and occasionally defrost. I guess I was bracing myself for the worst and am now pleasantly surprised at it's capabilities.
I don't have a lot of technical information to report, just my casual observance as I'm in and out of the garage a few times a day, but anyone questioning the cold weather performance of these things can take this for what it is. A pretty solid report from a mini split working in a pretty cold climate.
No doubt, the spray foam is helping. The building is sealed up tight and I do not open the main garage door at all. It's a totally spare garage with no vehicle usage. It's essentially a storage area for my hunting gear and a kennel for the dogs and it will soon become my home office and general workshop/man cave.
Hope this helps someone, happy answer any specific questions that folks have.
My garage is 24x24, located in Duluth, MN.
I opted to go with spray foam and paid for 2.5" on walls and 3" on the ceiling. As others had suggested I might, I feel I got more than I paid for. More like 3"+ on the walls and 3.5"+ on the rafters. I do not have a ceiling in, so it's just open rafters.
There's a 16 foot heavy wood garage door. I was looking at replacing it but thought I would wait and see through the first winter. I did have someone come out and look at it and he said it might do just fine, he said sometimes these doors even have styrofoam in the panels... not sure about that.
For heat, I purchased this two-ton cold climate mini split from Senville which has rated heating performance down to -22. I bought the vacuum pump and additional tools to install this myself and successfully complete the job, which is a miracle in itself, seriously.
Heating capability was a huge question mark for me and we'd had a pretty mild winter up until the past week. About November I set the mini split to 69 in the garage and it's been there ever since. We've been subzero here for over a week straight now and definitely below -22 overnight and I can happily report the Senville mini split, has not wavered. It continues to heat and occasionally defrost. I guess I was bracing myself for the worst and am now pleasantly surprised at it's capabilities.
I don't have a lot of technical information to report, just my casual observance as I'm in and out of the garage a few times a day, but anyone questioning the cold weather performance of these things can take this for what it is. A pretty solid report from a mini split working in a pretty cold climate.
No doubt, the spray foam is helping. The building is sealed up tight and I do not open the main garage door at all. It's a totally spare garage with no vehicle usage. It's essentially a storage area for my hunting gear and a kennel for the dogs and it will soon become my home office and general workshop/man cave.
Hope this helps someone, happy answer any specific questions that folks have.