Quote:
Originally Posted by karren
I am having trouble keeping my small home attached, twinwall greenhouse warm enough. I see at places like Charley's Greenhouse offer two kinds of insulation, plastic bubbles and foil. Any experience with either one of these? Where and how long do you use it?
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Karren
The clear bubble wrap type insulation is intended to be used on the inside of your existing glazing material. Since it is transparent it will allow sunlight in but help reduce heat loss to the outside. It's basically like adding another layer of twinwall to your greenhouse. With that in mind, all glazing in your ghouse that gets direct sunlight would benefit from the bubble wrap.
The foil insulation, Reflectix, is is actually two layers of thin bubble wrap stuck together with a layer of foil on both outside facing surfaces. Reflectix type insulation is called a radiant heat barrier and works because the foil surface reflects heat back into the greenhouse. It acts just like the silvered glass liner in a Thermos bottle. Greenhouse surfaces that would benefit from Reflectix would be foundation walls or any north facing glazing that does not get direct sunlight. Obviously the foil blocks all sunlight but it also reflects sunlight so it could be used on a north wall to help bounce light back into the greenhouse.
For the foil insulation to be the most effective it needs an airspace on both sides so it would be best installed with a spacer between it and any surface it is installed against. For north facing glazing the foil would be best attached to the greenhouse frame and not installed directly against the glazing material.
Lowes and Home Depot both sell Reflectix in 24 and 48 inch wide rolls.
Ron