[alberg30] getting to insulation
FINNUS505 at aol.com
FINNUS505 at aol.com
Mon Jan 17 10:53:32 PST 2000
From: FINNUS505 at aol.com
In a message dated 1/14/00 11:53:46 AM Eastern Standard Time,
SandersM at aol.com writes:
<< Lee, greetings.
I read your account with interest. For those of us without engine access
problems, your experience is still useful for what you found when you cut
open your icebox. I wonder: Was the insulation cavity -- the space in
which
you found the styrofoam and newspapers laid in -- one continuous space, or
was it baffled, or compartmentalized? It occurs to me that one might cut a
couple of access holes in the interior of the box, pull out the old
material,
and fill it with some sort of injectable foam/gel sort of insulation. Would
that seem to you -- having now had the exerpience of dismantling the icebox
and having seen the interior construction -- to be a workable fix for the
icebox? If so, do you have any suggestions about how best to proceed on
such
a project?
Sanders McNew.
>>
Hi Sanders,
No, there were no baffles of any kind inbetween the fiberglass liner and the
wooden case. I think your solution to improving the insulation of the ice
box should work fine. It will betough to break up the styrofoam sheets and
fish out the pieces through holes in the liner, but not impossible.One caveat
though- I did find some rot begining in the aft wall of the ice box, from
where water had worked in through the cockpit access. The drain hoses that
should have carried the water from the lip in the hatch were clogged, and the
overflowing rain water had done the damage. When you cut your access holes,
try to inspect as much of the wood as you can see, and if you find
superficial soft wood, spraying some git rot or other thinned epoxy on the
wood may be a good idea. The inside of the wooden case had no paint or finish
on it at all, and sprayed foam insulation might trap moisture against it,
causing rot to start. You might want to make the access holes big enough, or
make enough small ones, so you could coat and seal the wood surface with
epoxy, before spraying in the foam.
Hope this helps,
Lee
Stargazer
#255
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