Maddog
★★★★★ Legendary Member
Other when I wash vehicles, our garage floor stays very dry.
We have (2) floor drains. One up front near the vehicles and one back in the attached shop.
Garage is well insulated and attached to the house (2x4 stud walls). Garage always stays above freezing temp with only passive heating from the house (meaning heat loss from the house). For example, 32 degrees outdoors, garage is around 50 degrees. 0 degrees outdoors, around 35 degrees in the garage. (Assuming the wife doesn't leave the garage door open for more than driving a vehicle in/out. Otherwise it takes a long time to recover the heat loss from having the door open.)
The air exchange we have is primarily through driving vehicles in/out.
Ceiling is sheet rocked and then insulated with 6"+ of blown insulation.
Prior to driving snow covered vehicles into the garage, I try to get off 90% of the snow.
In the winter I install plastic sheets on the inside of the window frames to minimize heat loss/condensation/frost due to glass.
I like our setup.
The only thing I don't care for is the gas fired, floor mount furnace in the shop area. Even though there is a sealed combustion chamber (uses outside air for combustion), there is a lot of heat loss through that during the unused time. So lately, I am doing less and less out in the shop during the winter and I have covered the exhaust/intake vent to the outside when not in use.
We have (2) floor drains. One up front near the vehicles and one back in the attached shop.
Garage is well insulated and attached to the house (2x4 stud walls). Garage always stays above freezing temp with only passive heating from the house (meaning heat loss from the house). For example, 32 degrees outdoors, garage is around 50 degrees. 0 degrees outdoors, around 35 degrees in the garage. (Assuming the wife doesn't leave the garage door open for more than driving a vehicle in/out. Otherwise it takes a long time to recover the heat loss from having the door open.)
The air exchange we have is primarily through driving vehicles in/out.
Ceiling is sheet rocked and then insulated with 6"+ of blown insulation.
Prior to driving snow covered vehicles into the garage, I try to get off 90% of the snow.
In the winter I install plastic sheets on the inside of the window frames to minimize heat loss/condensation/frost due to glass.
I like our setup.
The only thing I don't care for is the gas fired, floor mount furnace in the shop area. Even though there is a sealed combustion chamber (uses outside air for combustion), there is a lot of heat loss through that during the unused time. So lately, I am doing less and less out in the shop during the winter and I have covered the exhaust/intake vent to the outside when not in use.