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Thinsulate is intended for clothing so it is primarily rated in CLO
units or Clothing equivelent units. A CLO is sort of like the Chill factor. It is the amount of insulation required to keep a body comfortable at 70ºF in still air. One CLO is roughly equal to R1.14 but the effective CLO depends on what clothing is on either side. There are many grades of thinsulate with different lofts and CLO ratings that theoretically range from about R0.6 to arround R3.5. The Primaloft Sport used in down jackets is 1.2" thick and rated at R3.4 so regular urethane foam works out about twice as good. Overall it is great for socks and gloves because it is flexable but not the best for refrigerator insulation. RodiniaOne wrote: Does anyone have experience using 3M thinsulate material in conjunction with foam to insulate an icebox / cooler? I am rebuilding a 26ft Haida sailboat and, as space is at a premium, I am trying to reduce the thickness of the insulation needed around the icebox. Thanks for your input Robert -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |