I live in AZ and will be here most of the time other than short trips. But I've been struggling with if/how to insulate my Chevy Express hi-top against the COLD winter (yes it can be!), without tearing the manufacturers walls and ceiling down. I will only have this van another year or two at most, so I would rather not gut it. Currently, there is some old fiberglass in the walls and nothing in the roof above the headliner besides the ac/heat junction box and hoses to the ceiling vents. It IS possible to get into the walls through various openings, and the ceiling can be accessed from the front and back. However, could only put more loft type insulation in there like fiberglass or blown-in kind because the openings are small.
Side note: I use 1 inch foam board cutouts for the windows with felt on one side. I have insulated curtains for the front, covering the cab down to the floor boards (cab windows also covered). As it is now, at it's coldest point, the van is consistently 6 degrees warmer than outside, that's all.
I would like to try to get a few more degrees warmer since we have lots of mornings in the 30's, so...
Question 1: Will blown-in insulation (not foam), or the stuff-able kind that I can get into the walls and ceiling by hand give me a few degrees warmer, or not worth the trouble?
Question 2: What are some typical outside to inside temp differences in cold weather. I understand this is hard to quantify but just a range.
Any ideas for insulating existing walls would be greatly appreciated!
Side note: I use 1 inch foam board cutouts for the windows with felt on one side. I have insulated curtains for the front, covering the cab down to the floor boards (cab windows also covered). As it is now, at it's coldest point, the van is consistently 6 degrees warmer than outside, that's all.
I would like to try to get a few more degrees warmer since we have lots of mornings in the 30's, so...
Question 1: Will blown-in insulation (not foam), or the stuff-able kind that I can get into the walls and ceiling by hand give me a few degrees warmer, or not worth the trouble?
Question 2: What are some typical outside to inside temp differences in cold weather. I understand this is hard to quantify but just a range.
Any ideas for insulating existing walls would be greatly appreciated!