i should have said its for when your doing a days work away from home or in a hot location like an attic or just without shadeThanks, but doing all that made me sweat like a horse.![]()

i should have said its for when your doing a days work away from home or in a hot location like an attic or just without shadeThanks, but doing all that made me sweat like a horse.![]()

ExactlyNice
Well yes, if the external ambient temperature is constant over a long period.I suggest, you go back to school, and see if you can learn some very basic physics!
Insulation, on it's own, can only delay the inevitable, of the insulated item increasing or cooling to match the external ambient temperature. The only way to avoid the inevitable, is by heat, or cooling input, which ever is needed.
Wrong about what? I criticised your analogy in relation to my post, i.e. it makes no comparable sense. If you have to freeze something then it will thaw out (at room temperature) unless you keep it frozen.Massive swerve from the chicanery-meister!
Tell me how I'm wrong, Boyo?
Nonsense. 24 hour daily temperature cycles vary enormously. Having a well insulated house is hugely beneficial in regulating internal temperature.Insulation, just delays the inevitable
What do you mean?Solar gain is definitely a complicating factor when looking at an idealised scenario.
What do you mean?
...and of course night time.I was thinking about the theory that, over time, the inside temperature would equal the outside temperature. But then you have to factor in the masonry getting heated up each day by the sun. And that's before you add in the solar gain through the windows. It just makes it all a lot more complicated.

What is it then?...and of course night time.
Incidentally, my masonry and roof are cool to the touch indoors, when the sun is beating down on them outside. And it's not because of ice lollies in the cavity.
Witchcraft.What is it then?

Perhaps you need to read this.The stupid consecutive governments have put in place building regs for keeping homes warm without one thought to how they will keep them cool.
Wrong about what? I criticised your analogy in relation to my post, i.e. it makes no comparable sense. If you have to freeze something then it will thaw out (at room temperature) unless you keep it frozen.
Do fridges and freezers have insulation in them I wonder? Does the space shuttle burn it's occupants to death as it re-enters the atmosphere? Do warm blooded inhabitants on earth have a way of regulating their temperature I wonder?
Nonsense. 24 hour daily temperature cycles vary enormously. Having a well insulated house is hugely beneficial in regulating internal temperature.
Just remind them noseall what your qualifications are and in what trade
I think we know his qualificationsyou always have to be a complete arrs!![]()