Making the BEST Insulated Subfloor for my Ford Transit Van Conversion (PT. 1)

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  • čas přidán 29. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 129

  • @effie2206
    @effie2206 Před 2 lety +9

    Nice job, I plan to do a similar floor in my van (once Ford will get around to build it). I agree that wood on the floor is not the best practice but on the other hand aluminum is one of the best heat transfer material, my plan is to use square fiberglass rods instead, 1 or 1.5 inch. Not only less heat transfer but also a way to route water pipes and electrical harness under the floor.
    Cheers, keep at it.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +6

      Hi Effie!! You bring up some fantastic points, and issues that I also gave hours and hours of thought to. In my estimation, using a large dollop of adhesive between the van floor and the aluminum rails will serve as a small thermal break. I've been planning on measuring the surface temperature of the flooring once I can reasonably try to heat the interior of the van, paying special attention to the areas directly above the aluminum rails to see if they are in fact acting as thermal bridges, and I'll for sure be making a future video showing the tests.
      Also, you totally hit on something I plan on addressing in part 2 of this video. Spoiler alert, if I could do it over again, the only real change I think I'd make is I would go up to 1.5" foam board and 1.5" aluminum rails. It's hard to say how critical that .5" is until I get the finished ceiling in, but I suspect at my height of 5'10", I'll probably care more about having warmer flooring.
      And finally, ***I would so, so strongly advise against running your plumbing through your flooring.***
      George at Humble Road used to do exactly that and has moved completely away from the practice citing the risk should any of the plumbing components leak. You'd genuinely have to remove all of your interior build in order to gain full access to plumbing routed through the subfloor.

    • @brianchetelat6601
      @brianchetelat6601 Před 2 lety +1

      Effie, I can appreciate the idea around fiberglass rods and heat transfer but wouldn't those be outrageously expensive?

    • @effie2206
      @effie2206 Před 2 lety +2

      @@ErikJohnson2020 Depending on my van layout I may need to run plumbing under the floor. The plan is to run a PEX pipe inside a square fiberglass tube (aluminum is also an option) from one side of the van to the other, I’ll have an access point at each end (out of sight) so the pipe can be changed if necessary. There will be no fittings down there and my only (small) concern is movement of the pipe inside the tube, maybe some silicon can take care of this.
      I follow George and I admire the work he is doing but some things I will do different, not necessarily better, just using my knowledge and experience to make it work for me.

    • @effie2206
      @effie2206 Před 2 lety +1

      @@brianchetelat6601 That's what I thought, did some research and found some reasonable options, more expensive but not outrageously so. (can't write product name, my reply is not being posted ???)

    • @brianchetelat6601
      @brianchetelat6601 Před 2 lety

      @@effie2206 Understood.

  • @jeffreyhimmelman
    @jeffreyhimmelman Před 2 lety +2

    I've been watching tons of subfloor videos to prep for the next project on my build (including some really painful ones that seemed to take tons of tries to get right). You've got the best method I've seen. So glad I found your channel! Thanks for making this.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +3

      Thank you!! I put a lot of thought into the design of the subfloor, in the efficiency of the layout, the overall strength, and longevity of the system. Time will tell, but it's been absolutely rock solid thus far.

  • @mikefranks4528
    @mikefranks4528 Před rokem +1

    George from Humble Road did this technique also a while back. Great to see it again. And thanks for showing the pricing...that's a plus!

  • @thudang3039
    @thudang3039 Před rokem

    Thank you. I appreciate the tidbit about cutting foam board - having not worked with it yet, it's a nice bit of commentary to help with getting cleaner cuts.

  • @rdwilander
    @rdwilander Před 2 lety +4

    Nice work, great video and editing. I really like the voiceover explanations and the tips you are learning as you go.... 10/10

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you!!! I really like your detailed feedback! 😉 Hope to see you in the comment section on future videos!

  • @deannajohnson8415
    @deannajohnson8415 Před 2 lety +1

    You are so knowledgeable and thorough. What a great resource! I’m learning so much! And nice cutting, Anna!!

  • @TrailBoundco
    @TrailBoundco Před rokem +4

    Isn’t that aluminum going to bring the cold through from the bottom of the van closer to the floor and bring down your insulation r value

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před rokem +1

      I suspect it certainly transfers a little bit of heat/cold, but that's just one of the trade-offs I chose to ensure I had a rock-solid foundation that wouldn't rust or rot over the years. That said, I've also tried measuring the temperature at the surface of my subfloor to see if the areas directly above the aluminum ribs were noticeably colder than the areas with just foam, and at least with my laser thermal gun, there isn't any difference. Hope that helps!

  • @leahwalker3736
    @leahwalker3736 Před 2 lety +1

    It interests me because I will be doing my van in a few months.

  • @GirlsGuide2Packing
    @GirlsGuide2Packing Před 2 lety +2

    Wow this project looks DENSE. Loved seeing Anna pop in. When do I get to appear on your channel??

  • @CLdriver1960
    @CLdriver1960 Před 2 lety +1

    Nice work! I recently insulated and covered the floor of my Promaster City. It has about 1/3 the floor space of your van, so I was able to get away with one 4x8 sheet of plywood. I used 1x3 wooden slats instead of aluminum and coated them with that green wood preservative. Between the slats, I used 3/4 inch expanded polystyrene insulation. I then covered the floor with a vapour barrier before laying down the plywood sub floor.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +1

      One plywood sheet!? Lol, I think I used something like 90% of the three sheets in my build.

  • @AJourneyOfYourSoul
    @AJourneyOfYourSoul Před 2 lety +1

    You are doing some good work.
    It's funny, I just got done renovating a house also and brought my new Transit home a few weeks ago. 350, SRW, HR, EXT, AWD, Ecoboost.
    Small world.
    My back of the napkin budget is about $25k for the conversion, so when I saw your budget number I got a little concerned, since I know you went into more detail coming up with your figure than I did. Every time you put something in your van that I am not, I subtract it from your number. We are getting closer to that $25k, lol
    All the little accessories and materials, like adhesives, hardware etc.... really adds up.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +2

      LOL! I love the "back of the napkin" math because I can 100% relate to that step. Yeah, the budget for van conversions has a remarkable ability to balloon. I'm already within spitting distance of matching the same budget of our entire 3bd 3ba remodel, and my van build is only something like 80 square feet. 😅
      So just hitting the big categories, my budget is as follows:
      Electrical System: $8,629
      Exterior Improvements: $3,905
      Temperature Control: $2,920
      Kitchen: $3,601
      Water/Plumbing: $755
      Bathroom/shower: $1,507
      Insulation: $2,200
      Windows & Flares: $3,210
      Lighting: $128
      Swivel Seats: $850
      Cabinetry & 80/20 Rails: $3,748
      Flooring: $504
      Specialized Tools: $409
      Unexpected/Misc: $3,018
      Total: $35,384
      So I'm no accountant, but basically my approach was to lump all the consumables or materials that might be used across multiple projects into the "misc" category, and just hope that my "10%" cushion covers it all.

  • @plunkit
    @plunkit Před 2 lety +3

    If you don't already know this small tip. You caulking gun has a tip snipper on it. The little circle on the side of the handle will cut the tip off when you clamp down. Fingers are important to keep. :)

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +1

      Sadly, my cheap-o caulk gun's clipper does a horrible job of actually cutting. 😢

  • @digitaldan8223
    @digitaldan8223 Před rokem +1

    Next time, use the black plastic wheel well covers to make your radiuses on your cardboard templates. Floor looks awesome, great job!

  • @RealtorNewBernNC
    @RealtorNewBernNC Před rokem

    This was one of the best floor videos I have found. Love the explanations as to why you did what. Thanks for sharing your goofs so I won't make them!

  • @brianchetelat6601
    @brianchetelat6601 Před 2 lety +1

    Great job Erik, still watching you closely and still waiting on Ford to start mine : )

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +1

      Hey Brian! Glad to see you're still here!! 🥰
      Any ETA on when your van is gonna be delivered?

    • @brianchetelat6601
      @brianchetelat6601 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ErikJohnson2020 Some time in February but I'm not holding my breath : )

  • @maryannel89
    @maryannel89 Před 2 lety +2

    You're much more comfortable in front of the camera now! Your personality is showing more. Great video! Super entertaining and informative. Keep it up!
    Also, how many times have you gone to Home Depot/hardware stores since you started your vanbuild? Lol, must be your second home, am I right?

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety

      Thank you Mary Anne!! 🥰🥰
      And remarkably so far I think I've only gone to Home Depot/Lowes a total of 4 times? But I'm certain that once I get into the cabinetry and the and the finishing woodwork it'll be a very different story.

  • @mooseinavan
    @mooseinavan Před rokem +1

    Uh. I was really excited to get started on this in my Transit. So much so that I bought the required 11 aluminum tubes TWICE! So if anyone's watching this and wants a deal on the aluminum, hit me up.

  • @grantlingley1385
    @grantlingley1385 Před 2 lety +1

    Hey Erik, really enjoying your videos! We had a great vacation to Scotland a few weeks ago where we rented a VW Transporter Campervan....Love it by the way...so much so that I reached out to VW Canada to see if they are available. Sadly no! I can look into Importing or maybe going your route with a Transit. I like the idea of readily available service anywhere in North America for sure and will continue watching your work to see what this will cost in the end. My hope is camping / travelling with my Wife and Off road Moto Trips with my Buddies.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +1

      Well I'm probably about 90-ish % finished with all of the materials acquisitions for the entire build, and including the cost of the vehicle itself the total cost of my conversion is $93,705.75
      Hope that helps!

  • @kaleidiatrikos
    @kaleidiatrikos Před rokem

    Thanks for making these videos. I’m planning to convert an old transit Connect XLT, and didn’t have a clue

  • @granitfog
    @granitfog Před 2 lety +1

    I've used an electric carving knife - a little slow but a nice clean cut with almost zero dust.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +2

      Currently an electric carving knife is the forerunner of tools I'm planning on using when I get to cutting my custom fit mattress. 😅

  • @USARoadtrip364
    @USARoadtrip364 Před 6 měsíci

    thanks for sharing your video for remodeling you Van.

  • @jessmatthewson7775
    @jessmatthewson7775 Před 2 lety +2

    Thanks Eric this is going to be good insulation aa well as a bit of noise-reduction too. Is that the longest van bed Ford offers...there's alot of room behind those wheel wells. Appreciate your sharing with us great job 🤓

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +2

      Thank you! 😊 And yes, this is the extended length version of the Ford Transit 350, with the single rear-wheel.

  • @sambell904
    @sambell904 Před rokem +6

    Why bother putting insulation in when you put aluminum heat sinks in it to transfer the heat or cold directly to the sub floor from the van sheet metal floor? The only thing that should touching the van floor is insulation.

    • @sonofrobert
      @sonofrobert Před 11 měsíci

      I also thought the metal would transfer heat, cold.
      What about the bed liner spray and epoxy self leveling floor.
      Water couldn't get in and maybe ok for insulation and quiet.

    • @this-is-slammin-549
      @this-is-slammin-549 Před 7 měsíci

      Quit splitting hairs. It’s a van. It’s not like the aluminum completely negates the insulation.
      And if you believe it does. … you’re the idiot.

  • @elshivi8323
    @elshivi8323 Před 4 měsíci

    Good job, thanks for the inspiration

  • @ange846
    @ange846 Před 2 lety

    thank you for the through details and the cost summary 🌟

  • @laurenlee82
    @laurenlee82 Před 2 lety

    I just became your 1,000th subscriber. 😊

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety

      !!!!Thanks Lauren!!!! I'm stoked that you left a comment so that I could know who you were too! 🥰 Hope you're enjoying the content!

  • @vegassid3247
    @vegassid3247 Před rokem +1

    Humble Road has used this technique

  • @user-grannytbone
    @user-grannytbone Před 3 měsíci

    good work

  • @johnfitbyfaithnet
    @johnfitbyfaithnet Před 2 lety

    Good job, watched it all

  • @joeyt684
    @joeyt684 Před 2 lety

    Watched to the end 😇. Awesome job! Subbed.

  • @morphergaming0531
    @morphergaming0531 Před rokem

    Looks great

  • @neverquit6939
    @neverquit6939 Před 2 lety

    Subscribed. You are super duper.
    Respectfully, Erik as well

  • @eo8513
    @eo8513 Před rokem

    I didn't see the razor blade utility knife tool in your Amazon store. What kind is it? Definitely not the Milwaukee one in the store. Awesome content!

  • @this-is-slammin-549
    @this-is-slammin-549 Před rokem +1

    That insulation will absorb moisture

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před rokem

      If you want to see the spec sheet for the R-tech extruded polystyrene rigid foam boards that I used (including their water resistant properties), you can find that info here: www.insulfoam.com/insulation-panels/

  • @sonofrobert
    @sonofrobert Před 11 měsíci

    I also thought the metal would transfer heat, cold.
    What about the bed liner spray and epoxy self leveling floor.
    Water couldn't get in and maybe ok for insulation and quiet.

  • @Mister.YellowSquare
    @Mister.YellowSquare Před 3 měsíci

    Will adhesive bond long term if I painted the floor in a rust preventative?

  • @bigsildonie1
    @bigsildonie1 Před rokem

    Do you not need to sound deaden the van floor before you put down the sub floor? I guess adhering the sub floor to the van floor cuts out the noise?

  • @prophetseven728
    @prophetseven728 Před rokem

    Interresting. That a lot of inchs you taken up no your floor. I used the 1/4 plywood that the manufactures used. double up on cork. No frame under. letting it breath. And LifeProof on top. Lets see what happens.

  • @Mister.YellowSquare
    @Mister.YellowSquare Před 3 měsíci

    How come there is a gap of aluminum on the sliding door foot step

  • @katyd4183
    @katyd4183 Před rokem +1

    Please explain why take all vinyl trim and not use some of it for lining floor, wheel wells, etc.

    • @one8434
      @one8434 Před 9 měsíci

      cant anchor the floor to vinyl

  • @arieswar4770
    @arieswar4770 Před 7 měsíci

    @ 11:09 Why not use the original flooring as a template? I don't know too much work for flooring but that just me ;-)

  • @bigman2xl905
    @bigman2xl905 Před rokem

    Oh Ya, oh ya!!!

  • @rizzors25
    @rizzors25 Před rokem

    Hey hoping you'll see this but going to do the same thing here in the coming weeks, over time did you have any issues/floor movement because of no supports added perpenicular to your bars? Trying to figure out how much aluminum to get!

  • @danah358
    @danah358 Před rokem

    Should insulate wheel bumps before templating floor?

  • @RustyCas999
    @RustyCas999 Před rokem

    You only need “styrofoam” adhesive if you are using “unfaced” panels. In this video he’s actually gluing the foil facing to metal, so styrofoam adhesive - which is designed to react with the foam - is *not* the best choice. Should have just used construction adhesive.🎉

  • @BobWhite-pl6ho
    @BobWhite-pl6ho Před rokem

    Hi Eric - Wondering how the Seal Bond 105 worked????? Any problems or were you satisfied with the results??? Thanks

  • @GuitarJams-zs7yf
    @GuitarJams-zs7yf Před rokem +1

    I am just curious why you didn't use the pre-existing carpet for a template to cut your floor insulation.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před rokem +1

      As I mentioned at the start of the video, there are a couple of reasons I didn't take that approach.
      1) It would have required one more 4x8 sheet of plywood and rigid foam to allow you to trace out a full template. You can find hundreds of videos of other people doing exactly that. It's a waste of materials and honestly takes longer to do.
      2) The padded flooring from the factory isn't actually an exact match to the van's floor. If you buy one, you'll see that it's actually just shy of 1" smaller in every dimension vs the van walls. So if you use the carpet for your template, you'd be losing nearly 2" of extremely valuable floor space when it's all said and done. Hope this helps!

    • @GuitarJams-zs7yf
      @GuitarJams-zs7yf Před rokem

      @@ErikJohnson2020 I see. Thanks for the reply.

  • @nomadicrn7674
    @nomadicrn7674 Před 11 měsíci

    Posted on your part 2, but will ask here too... How do you plan to access the spare tire since you covered the access key hole with a bar?

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 11 měsíci

      I'm planning on waiting until I have the finished flooring installed, then drilling an access hole through all of the layers at the same time and then installing a removable metal cap to gain access on demand.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 11 měsíci

      Also, the access key isn't covered with an aluminum rail. You can see at 18:38 timestamp that first rail is positioned next to, but not above the access key. The camera angle might make it confusing.

  • @weekendlovinggypsy1737
    @weekendlovinggypsy1737 Před 11 měsíci

    I've seen where they use a dense rubber for all the low parts of the floor between the ribs. What are your thoughts.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 11 měsíci +1

      I know that FarOutRide made that same recommendation to add a little more insulation to the floor system. However, George at Humble Road suggests, and I agree, that intentionally leaving those channels open allows for increased airflow to minimize the inevitable buildup of water (condensation) and resulting rust or mold growth.
      Sure it's less insulation, but the tradeoff is worth it in my mind.

  • @hardly_working
    @hardly_working Před rokem

    What did you end up finishing the floors with?

  • @justjenkinaround5116
    @justjenkinaround5116 Před 5 měsíci

    You didn’t put a sound or cushion layer down before the aluminum and wondered why?

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 5 měsíci +2

      Correct. For several reasons:
      1) Rigidity. The entire build is going to sit on top of this foundation, and I want it to be as solid of a connection as possible, with zero room for compression/movement.
      2) Mold/rot. Water is going to condense, and then collect on the floor of the van, and this is unavoidable. I didn't want any material near the floor of the van that can rot, mold, or break down over time. Even if the material is impervious, I don't want anything that might inhibit airflow for moisture evaporation.
      3) It's not needed. All the insulation and plywood layers, plus the finished flooring and rugs all add to the noise absorption of the entire floor system. I promise you, the shit inside your van rattling around is 10x louder than any road noise.

    • @justjenkinaround5116
      @justjenkinaround5116 Před 5 měsíci

      @@ErikJohnson2020 very good explanation and just the elements I was pondering for mine. Your build is the best I’ve seen and made the most sense for the moisture issue. Thank you so much for sharing your wealth of knowledge and insight. Now that you’ve been using it for a couple years, how has it held up?

  • @joeyt684
    @joeyt684 Před 2 lety

    Just had an incredibly brilliant (or ridiculously stupid) idea...TREX for the flooring frame. Rip a bunch of 2x4s to size.
    Thoughts?

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety

      Trex would probably do just fine as a subframe material that's mold and water resistant, but I'm not sure the price savings would actually offset the additional time needed to mill/process the trex down to your exact size requirements. The big advantage to aluminum ready-tube is that you just cut it to length, and you're done. Plus the Hollow core of the aluminum tube probably means it'd be less weight vs the Trex.

    • @katyd4183
      @katyd4183 Před rokem

      My plan....picked up 2x4 last night.

  • @AZRockRunner
    @AZRockRunner Před 2 lety +1

    Wonder what do you gain with alum tube instead of wood?

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety

      Aluminum is significantly lighter weight, and is effectively mold/rot-proof. Wood is much less expensive, and is slightly more insulating (though, still isn't a good insulator), but with prolonged exposure to moisture will eventually rot. RVs probably have more in common with boats than they do with houses, so designing everything to be marine grade will almost assuredly save you future headaches. Hope this helps!

    • @AZRockRunner
      @AZRockRunner Před 2 lety

      @@ErikJohnson2020 Typical DIY, overkilled, no engineering.

    • @joeyt684
      @joeyt684 Před 2 lety

      @@AZRockRunner Thanks for sharing :-(.

  • @scottgreeson3568
    @scottgreeson3568 Před rokem +1

    Why didn't you just use the floor that you removed as the template? Seems like a lot of extra work to make your own cardboard template when one had already been factory made for you...

    • @one8434
      @one8434 Před 9 měsíci

      he explained in the video and comments

  • @J1mboB
    @J1mboB Před 2 lety

    Any particular reason you didn't put Kilmat in the valleys to reduce the vibrations there?

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +1

      I explain why at the end of part two, so if you haven't watched that yet, I'd recommend it. But the short answer is air flow.

    • @J1mboB
      @J1mboB Před 2 lety

      @@ErikJohnson2020 Thank you!!! ❤️❤️❤️

  • @bobmirror7164
    @bobmirror7164 Před 7 měsíci

    It is a big mistake to not make the floor removable, water flows in the direction of gravity ! The square aluminum tube is like why ? Because aluminum readily transfers the heat and cold up to the plywood flooring. Really need water drain holes in a floor designed like that.

  • @ZillaYT
    @ZillaYT Před 4 měsíci

    Could you have saved $ by using less expensive plywood grade?

  • @ZaneAhmed89
    @ZaneAhmed89 Před rokem

    What is the point of the aluminum framing on the floor?

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před rokem +1

      Light weight, won't rot or rust, and extremely strong foundation for the entire van build.

    • @sonofrobert
      @sonofrobert Před 11 měsíci +1

      The foam will collapse with weight.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@sonofrobert It's been 18 months, I've loaded thousands of pounds of tools onto my flooring numerous times, and the foam isn't compressing whatsoever. The entire point of the aluminum joists/studs spaced at 18" with a 3/4" thick plywood sub-floor is to distribute all the weight to the aluminum and not the foam.

  • @timdunmyer4549
    @timdunmyer4549 Před rokem

    You covered up your spare tire access nut. You might want to correct that.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před rokem

      Correct, once the finished floor is installed, I plan to drill an access hole and install a removable metal cover for it. But good eye!

  • @buysomerice
    @buysomerice Před 2 lety

    Couldn’t trace the original mat for the wells?

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 lety +2

      You could, but the mat was about 1" (2cm) smaller than the wheel wells, and I wanted a tighter fitting floorboard so I made the template. Hope that helps!

  • @Knifeinyolife
    @Knifeinyolife Před rokem

    No kilmat??

  • @chrisfs150
    @chrisfs150 Před rokem

    Why not just bond the foam to the floor then bond a plywood floor to the underlying foam?
    Oh i see you've virtually that written on the van floor some 100x but then ignored it...
    😫

    • @sonofrobert
      @sonofrobert Před 11 měsíci

      I think foam is a mistake because you have to joist it and it still could sag.

  • @theokaralenka
    @theokaralenka Před 8 měsíci +3

    I am sorry, by what is the point of those aluminum bars?? You just ruined the whole point of your insulation here, creating a direct cold bridge from the metal floor!
    And you are calling THIS the best insulated subfloor??? What a f..ng joke, this subfloor is not insulated at all!

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 8 měsíci +2

      Oh Theo, my sweet Summer Child. While you're correct that some thermal bridging does take place through the aluminum tubes, it's not even remotely close to enough to negate the insulation of the entire subfloor system. I've measured the temperatures of my floor using a lazer thermometer, and the widest temperature swing is 2° between the fasteners and the dead center of the rigid foam boards.
      Now the part that actually matters, and what you seem incapable of comprehending, is that aluminum won't rot, mold, or rust. And given condensation inside a temperature controlled RV is absolutely unavoidable, any other material that you might choose for better "insulation" properties WILL ABSOLUTELY ROT out from under your entire RV build.
      Go look at old RV renovations and see how extensive rot damage is in every single one of them.
      Also, learn how to research an idea before you go vomit your ignorance onto someone else's comment section.

  • @hellogoodbyeforever
    @hellogoodbyeforever Před 2 měsíci

    Never understood this. The floor doesn’t need all this.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 měsíci

      If you don't want to have to rip it up in 4-5 years because it is rotting out from under you, than yes, it does.
      Sincerely, go look at videos of vanlifers who've been in their van for a few years, and the prevalence of mold and rot issues they have under their floors.
      Moisture + no air flow + wood = rot.

    • @hellogoodbyeforever
      @hellogoodbyeforever Před 2 měsíci

      @@ErikJohnson2020 who the hell lives in a van for 5 years? Also, why is there water in the van in the first place? Good thing there is pressure treated plywood out there for those driving thru rivers.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 2 měsíci +1

      🤦‍♂️I shouldn't, but I will attempt to explain.
      Anytime you create a temperature controlled environment, meaning the temperature inside your awesome adventure van is different from the temperature outside, you will create condensation. Think of the condensation that collects on the outside of a cold glass of water on a hot summer day. You will have that exact same condensation effect taking place on the metal walls, ceiling, floors, and even glass windows of your van, but because the total surface area in a van is about 1000x larger than a drinking glass, you're going to be creating about 1000x more condensation within your van.
      The only way to avoid this would be keeping the temperature inside your van the exact same as the temperature outside, and that sounds like a pretty shit idea on a cold winter night or a hot summer day.
      So, once you understand that you are going to be creating condensation within your van, and that gravity is going to pull ALL of that moisture to the bottom of your van, underneath your floors...
      Are you starting to understand the problem?
      Who wants to invest tens of thousands of dollars and countless hours of their time into building a van that is going to rot out from underneath them?
      But if that's your goal, by all means, knock yourself out.

    • @hellogoodbyeforever
      @hellogoodbyeforever Před 2 měsíci

      @@ErikJohnson2020 yea you really shouldn’t have put in all that effort. I don’t even care to read all that, I’m building mine now, vapor barrier and 3/4 ply on top. Good enough for me. 🤷‍♂️

  • @joecool7165
    @joecool7165 Před 10 měsíci

    Another CZcams video of people not doing research before starting. They make an electric knife that’s hot just for this kind of thing you can change the blades on it.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 10 měsíci +1

      I already have tens of thousands of dollars worth of tools. I sincerely do not want, or need, yet another tool that only serves one purpose, and would only be used once in my lifetime.
      Others might appreciate the input though.

  • @dshnig
    @dshnig Před 10 měsíci +2

    Putting aluminum directly onto the metal negates everything.

    • @ErikJohnson2020
      @ErikJohnson2020  Před 10 měsíci +3

      How much thought did you put into this comment before posting? Obviously not much.

    • @TheMadMax1000
      @TheMadMax1000 Před 4 měsíci

      Jack ass

  • @mrabrasive51
    @mrabrasive51 Před 8 měsíci

    Jeez,your insulation a van subfloor!.you're not building a skyscraper!..total yawnfest.

  • @OffThePath9
    @OffThePath9 Před 6 měsíci

    Most boring first half van insulation video ever man

  • @nafod32
    @nafod32 Před rokem

    Her mask is a unhealthy habit