Bali Cellular Shades review with Thermal Image

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  • čas přidán 3. 09. 2018
  • These 3/8" double cell shades were purchased at lowes for roughly 250$ and are remote controlled. They are really reducing the heat flow into the house and worth every penny.

Komentáře • 39

  • @twiincentral8780
    @twiincentral8780 Před 3 lety +21

    Just wanted to say thank you for this. It’s so hard to find folks who actually test things. I’m in the process of trying to reduce my energy consumption to try and eventually go Net Zero, so this helped.

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před 3 lety +1

      Yes it is. I'm working my way into showing how it's done. Thanks for the feedback. Please consider subscribing.

    • @twiincentral8780
      @twiincentral8780 Před 3 lety

      Subscribed! I’ll look through your other videos, but do you have a heat pump or a furnace to heat your house?

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před 3 lety

      @@twiincentral8780 furnace with traditional ac condenser. I am installing a heat pump soon so I will not have any more bills. Going to do a video on that as well. Lots of good ideas for vids, just not a lot of time to make them. :)

  • @AlittleSmokey
    @AlittleSmokey Před 3 lety

    Awesome!! We went with Bali double cell blackout! Thank you for all your work

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před 3 lety

      Your welcome. Let me know how they perform for you and please consider subscribing.

  • @debraindxb
    @debraindxb Před rokem +1

    As a data analyst, I appreciate your level of detail and data

  • @csApollo11
    @csApollo11 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you so much for the video with actual testing!

  • @dus10dnd
    @dus10dnd Před 11 měsíci +1

    The best thing that I have found to limit heat gain from windows is solar screens. You can buy screening material that is heavier gauge up to your preference. I bought some 90% at the old house and it reduced the temperature directly inside of the window, behind the cellular shades, by 30F. I think the cellular shades help... but it mostly just slows down the transfer. That heat is already inside your house, at this point. The solar screens diminish the amount of light entering the windows at all. I installed these as our old HVAC at the old house was nearing its end of life and it helped us limp along with it for a couple more years (and even helped us live for a year with it failed and just a couple of the portable ACs; they wouldn't have stood any chance to keep us comfortable without those solar screens. It did work out that they were only on the back of the house (the most windows and southwest facing... so a huge impact).

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před 11 měsíci

      If your referring to solar screens that are external, yes 💯 agree.
      Agree with your shade comment. Heats already in the house. Shades just reduce the rate of transfer. Lots of folks don't understand this. Most films and screens work better on outside.

  • @RideByNight
    @RideByNight Před 3 lety

    This is such an awesome video. I have been looking for this kind of data for weeks b/c I was thinking about ordering some double cell shades. Thank you!!

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před 3 lety

      Your welcome. Let me know how they work out.

    • @RideByNight
      @RideByNight Před 3 lety

      @@stem_saving1644 I have ordered a set of double cell, light diffusing shades from Select Blinds and then another set (same specs) from Blindster. I'm going to compare the two companies and see which is better at temperature regulation.

  • @amarti7304
    @amarti7304 Před rokem +1

    great video. thanks

  • @mtemtl
    @mtemtl Před 3 lety +1

    awesome video. Thanks for sharing. Are those double pane or single pane windows?

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před 3 lety +2

      Thanks, They are all doubles.

    • @mtemtl
      @mtemtl Před 3 lety

      @@stem_saving1644 we have been considering double panes on west looking windows for a while but could not decide if we would still need cellular shade afterwards. I guess we will try the shades first, then, jump to double panes if necessary later on. Considering shades are much cheaper as a first step.

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před 3 lety

      The real key is blocking the radiant heat that comes in. The best way is low e glass, combined with cellular shades, this will really help. I'm looking for new windows for my home. I'm in the market for triple panes. The more panes the better.
      Let me know how your shades work out. Best of luck.

    • @mtemtl
      @mtemtl Před 3 lety

      @@stem_saving1644 Hey, wanted to check out if you have upgraded to triple panes. also as a follow up, were the ones in the video Low-e already? Thanks.

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před 3 lety

      Not yet. Getting close to pulling the trigger. Their prices seem cheaper for pella windows than pella direct. Will post a review.

  • @Xerazal
    @Xerazal Před 5 lety +1

    Were these light filtering, room darkening, or blackout shades?

  • @wiiiz3
    @wiiiz3 Před 3 lety

    do these shades help keep the temperature in a room warm in the winter?

  • @vince7735
    @vince7735 Před rokem

    You say the data shows a three degree drop in temperature but when you were demonstrating lowering the shade, the readings seemed to drop significantly lower than 3 degrees. Can you please clarify this for me. Thank you.

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před rokem +1

      Your looking at room temperature vs shade/window temperature. Not the same. Room temp is dependent on a few variables, mostly how many btus enter per unit time and area. Similar concept as lighting a match that's 300+f... doesn't mean the room will reach that temperature.

  • @dogiego
    @dogiego Před rokem

    With cellular shades, is each cell completely open from one side to the other? It appears that way from photos. I don't understand how they can be insulating with the cells totally open. Maybe I've been just looking at the cheap one?

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před rokem

      Yes. It uses the dead air in the shade as a means of insulation. There is some air movement on the sides, but way better than not having shades. There was a company that had track sealing sides, but they never returned my questions.

  • @mromneyobama
    @mromneyobama Před 5 lety

    Can you test it from a TV in a bedroom at dark?

  • @mikecher9890
    @mikecher9890 Před 5 lety +1

    can you compare vinyl, aluminum and cellular? to see the difference...

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před 5 lety

      Yes I have a couple video to post on that. Stay tuned.

    • @TheIVJackal
      @TheIVJackal Před 3 lety

      @@stem_saving1644 Hi, did you end up posting those? Couldn't find them in your channel.
      I'd be interested in comparing other types of blinds too (like 2" Venetian) , I haven't been able to find anyone that compares them! Yours was the best by far in regards to the cellular. Thanks!

  • @rfunk727
    @rfunk727 Před 2 lety

    I just spent 2 days scraping off my 20-year-old window tint (not fun at all). I was planning to use one of the new Ceramic window tints, but after watching this video, this might be better.

    • @stem_saving1644
      @stem_saving1644  Před 2 lety +2

      The tint on the inside is worthless. It really needs to be on the outside to really block radiant energy. All the inside one does is heat up. The key is total energy rejection not just radiant but thermal as well.

  • @korenng5553
    @korenng5553 Před 3 lety

    My sheer cellular got hit on top with hot sun Las Vegas SW-20 yrs !