My van is painted white.<br><br>I have under 1/4" of insulation on the walls. 1/8" carpet underlayment with 3/32 white plastic sheeting on top<br><br>Right now at 5:17 pm at 32' north the sun is beating on the side of my Van.<br>Ambient temp 82f<br>My IR thermometer says:<br>The window glass is not covered by cardboard is 114f<br>The window glass interior that is covered by the cardboard is 139.5f<br>The slightly insulated white colored interior right next to the window is 96. <br>The interior surface of my cardboard cut out is 100.5<span style="font-size: small;"> </span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">My light blue bed sheet in the sun reads 91.5</span><br><span style="font-size: small;">The light blue bed sheet in the shade reads 83.5</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">My cargo door window is open, but has a dual layered reflectix on top of quality cardboard, reflectix facing out at the sun. Interior surface temp 93.</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">The window is tinted charcoal gray by me, 6 years ago and needs to be redone.</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">Just closed the window so no air leaking around to cool it..</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">I have some magazine photos taped to the interior cardboard.</span><br><span style="font-size: small;">The cardboard surface temp is now 96f with window closed</span><br><span style="font-size: small;">On a black section of the photo, the surface temp is 95.5</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">On a white section of the photo, surface temp is 91.5.</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">So covering the window with anything, allows the window itself to get hotter and more likely to radiate that heat to the interior. Infra red, not visible.</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">Layers of insulation block the hot window from radiating heat to the interior. In my case it is black exterior facing dual layered cardboard 5/8 inches thick, with my former curtain adhered to the interior cardboard face.</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">As effective as my cardboard panels are in heat reduction, I still have hookless bungee cords across my windows to hold my pillows up to them. When the sun is low and directly beating on the black windows, the pillows with 3 to 5 inches of dead air space, along with the cardboard stop 98% of all radiated heat, and 100% of all light. The cardboard blocks 100% visible light on its own.</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">White/light colored interior surfaces will radiate less heat to the interior from the exterior. Polished silver would radiate the least from the exterior to interior, black would radiate the most. Get too close to polished silvery surfaces and you will feel your own radiated body heat reflected back at you.</span><br><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">On one of my windows I have a layer of 99 cent store imitation reflectix( from the front window shades, About 1/8 thick, in between the two layers of cardboard.</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">Surprisingly the surface temp of the cardboard with the 3rd layer only stays 1 to 1.5 degrees than the other window that faces the exact same sun angle, but only has 2 layers of cardboard . Black construction paper(now painted black, it turned light grey in a few months), and my curtain fabric adhered to the interior cardboard with double sided carpet tape across its whole surface</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">Formerly my curtains were dual layered. The pattern you see in my photo above, and the side facing out was dark black. They also fit very tightly against the window , but would get incredibly hot, radiating huge amounts of heat to the interior and I started layering reflectix along the window face, which helped, but was still intolerable trying to sleep in on an east facing window in summertime, and the reflectix from outside was obvious when the sun could hit the window.</span><br><br><span style="font-size: small;">Now my interior panels are pretty much invisible, and much less heat makes it inside. they are also easy to remove for when the fish bowl effect is desirable, such as when parked next to the ocean.</span><br>
<br><br>My conversion van window tint could certainly be darker, and the sunlight which did make it through would then have less energy to heat up the objects inside which it strikes. It is still hard to see inside from outside as long as the windows on the other side are closed.<br><br>Oh one more temp reading. The lower portion of my conversion van window has 1 layer of Flexfix tape adhered to the interior of the glass blocking about 95% of all visible light<br> The window section without the silver tape is Now, at 6:01pm, 110f<br>The window section WITH the silver tape adhered to the interior is 92.5.<br><br><br>I can put my hand inches away from both windows and easily feel the difference in heat from black to silver.