Your air conditioner's cooling
Posted: Sun Jun 29, 2014 4:18 pm
				
				Hi, Troy and all who read this!
I saw your video about your solar-powered air conditioning in your RV and I wanted to let you know that the small air gaps you have on the sides of your air conditioning are obviously letting the brand new cold air out and the hot air from the back of the A/C in. All you need to do is put a small piece of cardboard in those cracks from the boxes you get from viewers and it will help at least a little with your cooling issues in the RV.
Using cardboard is a better option if you're planning on moving out of that RV once your tiny house is done. You can obviously use spray foam (I did in my little setup at first) but the issue is that if you ever try to remove it, the foam will try to resist being moved and the sides of the A/C will have pieces of spray foam all over it, which is very difficult to remove. I learned this the hard way and some parts of it still have some dried foam on it because it's very hard to remove. (Using some oil-based things will help a lot in removing it)
Cardboard in the windows won't be too big of a deal until autumn once it starts getting cold. My off-grid playground setup is 100% insulated with recycled cardboard boxes 2~4 layers thick and it still manages to heat and cool well, so being stuck in little parts of a window won't be too big of a deal in my opinion.
			I saw your video about your solar-powered air conditioning in your RV and I wanted to let you know that the small air gaps you have on the sides of your air conditioning are obviously letting the brand new cold air out and the hot air from the back of the A/C in. All you need to do is put a small piece of cardboard in those cracks from the boxes you get from viewers and it will help at least a little with your cooling issues in the RV.
Using cardboard is a better option if you're planning on moving out of that RV once your tiny house is done. You can obviously use spray foam (I did in my little setup at first) but the issue is that if you ever try to remove it, the foam will try to resist being moved and the sides of the A/C will have pieces of spray foam all over it, which is very difficult to remove. I learned this the hard way and some parts of it still have some dried foam on it because it's very hard to remove. (Using some oil-based things will help a lot in removing it)
Cardboard in the windows won't be too big of a deal until autumn once it starts getting cold. My off-grid playground setup is 100% insulated with recycled cardboard boxes 2~4 layers thick and it still manages to heat and cool well, so being stuck in little parts of a window won't be too big of a deal in my opinion.