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It would be environmentally wrong to waste all those beads and use literally watts of electricity to vacuum them up. The environmentally responsible bus converter should lay the floor insulation right over it. All those beads should save a hundredth of a watt a decade at least.tango wrote:Looking good Jack! --- And no doubt you also have some trick for making all the styro-crumbs disappear. What's your technique...shop vac...static wand...or just teleport it into that other dimension where all lost socks go?
Dennisthebusdweller is the man to ask about foam. Here is a picture from inside his bus, during conversion.Lostranger wrote:Jack, your passing comment about spray foam caused me to do a Homer Simpson. "DOH!" McMaster Carr has a 30# DIY kit for $435. That's 17 cubic feet of 1.8lb/cf foam. I have no idea how far that would go, but even two of those would be less than what I was figuring to spend on polyiso board. From what I'm seeing on YouTube, it would be a HUGE time saver, plus, it gets all the cracks and corners. I'd have to wait until after the reskin next spring, but i'm thinking spray is the way. Anyone have experience with the stuff?
Sorry I haven't been following posts for a while. Don't shoot.ol trunt wrote: . . .
Another topic: I made up a "hall way switch " set up for thr recirculating hot water system so that it could be controlled at either the bath or kitchen--that works fine. I incorporated a couple of LED lamps as guide lamps so that one would know either in the kitchen or the bath that the solenoid shunt (back to the water tank) was on. The guide lamps were rated for 12 volts (AC or DC who knows) and came with built in resistors etc. They worked fine for a day and then both gave up the ghost. I am aware that you can screw up LEDs by reversing polarity--but I didn"t do that---unless---. I noticed while checking the voltage on the solenoid that when you cut power to the solenoid, the voltage measured shows a progression to zero. That doesn't happen with say a DC motor or lamp--the voltage just stops. Is it possible that the solenoid is acting like a capacitor and storing energy which is released when the solenoid goes to rest? If so, could this energy look to the LED like reversed polarity thereby causing LED failure????? I posed this question to the guys at the local Fry's Electronics where I bought the LEDs and got my favorite response--deer in the headlamps. anyone have a thought on this? Thanks, Jack
Hey Jack,I'm still puzzled as to why the mfg can't tell me if he means 12 v DC or AC or both????
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