Ceramic micro spheres are processed with a vacuum inside the sphere. Temperature transfer is limited in a vacuum. The sphere shape of these micro balls produces limited conduction due to such a small surface area touching one another.None of these thin products and or snake oil count as real insulation for a camper conversion. If it doesn't list an ASTM tested R value, its not worth considering.
Ceramic micro spheres are processed with a vacuum inside the sphere. Temperature transfer is limited in a vacuum. The sphere shape of these micro balls produces limited conduction due to such a small surface area touching one another.
I have personally tested micro spheres for temp transfer and find they actually work. When mixed with epoxy and vacuum packed in a 1" thick foil bag, R50 and better have been achieved.
I have tried Lizard skin and tested on a .125" thick sheet of aluminum. One side painted black and the other bare. Coated half the bottom side with paint mixed with LS and the other side bare. Set this out in the sun light on a 70 degree day. The results were dramatic. The un-coated side was to hot to touch. The coated side remained at near 70 degree temp.
I don't have a dog in the fight, however I have found micro spheres really work. While not a substitute for full insulation, coated surfaces can really augment and perhaps reduce the amount of insulation thickness required.
Of note-the underside of the space shuttles have a material similar to this designed to keep it from burning up.
Sciences Rules..Ceramic micro spheres are processed with a vacuum inside the sphere. Temperature transfer is limited in a vacuum. The sphere shape of these micro balls produces limited conduction due to such a small surface area touching one another.
I have personally tested micro spheres for temp transfer and find they actually work. When mixed with epoxy and vacuum packed in a 1" thick foil bag, R50 and better have been achieved.
I have tried Lizard skin and tested on a .125" thick sheet of aluminum. One side painted black and the other bare. Coated half the bottom side with paint mixed with LS and the other side bare. Set this out in the sun light on a 70 degree day. The results were dramatic. The un-coated side was to hot to touch. The coated side remained at near 70 degree temp.
I don't have a dog in the fight, however I have found micro spheres really work. While not a substitute for full insulation, coated surfaces can really augment and perhaps reduce the amount of insulation thickness required.
Of note-the underside of the space shuttles have a material similar to this designed to keep it from burning up.
I build composite canard airplanes for years and we use "Micro balloons" but as fillers, smaller than sand particles, delighted to touch, impossible to clean if you spill them..I have used Thermacells (sold on Amazon) as well as Lizard Skin and 3M micro spheres. Lizard skin was an all in one material. All of them actually worked. I found coating the outside (like a roof) to be more effective. It seems to stop a lot of heat transfer before insulation. Given these materials consist of ceramic hollow spheres, they are light weight and tough. Pour enough of it on a camper and it will float like a boat!
That's what they used on my roof when I had it done in August.I’ve used Grace ice and water shield (a roofing product) in place of dynamat for years on car rebuild projects. In Minneapolis any lumberyard would have it, about 1/4 or less of the dynamat cost and just as effective.
I had never heard of such products before. I was just reading more about the Lizardskin. Quite fascinating, and they say you can use it under the vehicle as well!I have used Thermacells (sold on Amazon) as well as Lizard Skin and 3M micro spheres. Lizard skin was an all in one material. All of them actually worked. I found coating the outside (like a roof) to be more effective. It seems to stop a lot of heat transfer before insulation. Given these materials consist of ceramic hollow spheres, they are light weight and tough. Pour enough of it on a camper and it will float like a boat!
Have you pressed your thumb into the foam in a few spots and checked any damaged areas for water.I had closed cell foam sprayed under my enclosed trailer that I used for work. I've put around 70,000 miles on it since then in all kinds of weather and it hasn't soaked up any moisture. It would be really hard to do the underside of my van completely that way though, you wouldn't want to cover any wiring or fuel or brake lines, anything mechanical. When closed cell foam sets up it is rock hard.
Might want to tell those companies that they can achieve R50 in thicknesses better than Home Depot fiberglass. Per ASTM C518-93, micro bubbles in 1" thick panels have a thermal conductivity at .065 mbar (vacuum) at 75 degrees F of .020 BTU-in/per square foot-hr-E. Panels are commercially available and are being installed on roofs of commercial and industrial buildings. We are now seeing these panels replace typical SIP panels in industrial freezing tunnels and continuous ovens. These plants are reporting significant energy reductions. Micro bubbles along with fumed silica can be made into composites and can be found in most hi-tech/space applications.Sure those products provide a small amount of insulation, so does a couple pieces of newspaper. The point is that this is all subjective without an actual R-value test. R-value testing is not expensive and every reputable company does it. the fact that they don't list one, instead using generic and pseudoscience terms, means that the actual insulation value is minimal. Yes it may be noticeable compared to un-insulated but comparing actual insulation to a thin layer of micro spheres is a laughable comparison.
Companies I've worked with have evaluated similar products for installation on aircraft where weight and R-value for thickness is up to tantamount importance. We found these products to provide almost no R-value compared to typical insulation products in the 0.5"+ inch thickness range. Especially when dealing with both hot and cold temperature gradients.
Then there's the combination of cost and time. Lizard skin in similar products lose dramatically on all of these fronts compared to typical insulation products used in automobiles and campers.
If you are really concerned about the ultimate R-value. You can easily achieve R25 or higher per inch by using vacuum insulated panels. They have obvious limitations in their usage and installation but provide a far superior value to any other insulation product available on the market.
I call BS on R50 per inch. Provide an independently verified test with the average value of a one square-foot panel being in this range please. Just not realistic.
This is one area where anecdotes simply don't cut it. The testing is simple and inexpensive for a mfg to perform. it is not done because it provides a effective baseline comparison. Which would make their products look very poor.