Last summer I had cellulose packed into my walls and followed up by adding new storm doors. The one in back faces directly south so I ordered low E glass for it.
I'm thrilled with how cool the house stays. I wish I'd had the work done years ago.
The largest difference is on the back door where the sun used to beat down and really heat the house interior up. The low E glass must really reflect a lot of heat/light back. Just inside the back door used to be hot. Now it remains the same temp as the rest of the house.
Interestingly enough, when I open the main door and grab the handle of the storm door, the handle has surprised me with the temperature. It gets hot! But the heat never makes it inside. Maybe it seals so much better that the little bit of heat that gets in can't escape?
I'm not sure what to make of it, but the area directly inside the big door (house interior) used to get hot. Now it doesn't.
I'm thrilled with how cool the house stays. I wish I'd had the work done years ago.
The largest difference is on the back door where the sun used to beat down and really heat the house interior up. The low E glass must really reflect a lot of heat/light back. Just inside the back door used to be hot. Now it remains the same temp as the rest of the house.
Interestingly enough, when I open the main door and grab the handle of the storm door, the handle has surprised me with the temperature. It gets hot! But the heat never makes it inside. Maybe it seals so much better that the little bit of heat that gets in can't escape?
I'm not sure what to make of it, but the area directly inside the big door (house interior) used to get hot. Now it doesn't.