Keeping the car cooler while parked
Just wondering if there is some new product out there (or an old one I don't know about) that will help to keep the car a bit cooler when it's parked.
I suppose keeping the windows open is one option, but that doesn't seem very secure.
The "Auto Cool" seemed like a good idea, until I read the reviews and studies that showed it not only doesn't keep the car cool, it also actually makes it hotter. Has anyone tried hooking up two so they get cross-ventilation? (Not sure if that works, since I don't know if the fans are reversible anyways.)
How about sunshades? Are there any that are actually good? The one we have works best when used as a mat for sitting on the ground, and not at all as something to keep the car cooler.
So, any ideas would be really excellent. Thanks!
Some lessons from the Valley of the Sun
From experience down here in Arizona, I can tell you most efforts to keep a car cool doesn't work, except covered parking. Sunshades make it so when you get in you don't burn yourself on your steering wheel or turning the key, but the car will still be hot.
Outside of a remote starter to blast the AC, I'm not sure if there is a sure fire way to keep the heat out.
You might try, if you'll be parking the car for the better part of several hours or a day, putting a cover over your car. That might keep the temperature down far more than just a simple sunshade on the dashboard. I've yet to try it (and I might try it out in the next few months my self).
That's the only new thing I can think of.
-Arizona Brad
Nothing much works.. but can help somewhat
I used to spend a fair amount of time in the desert, near Palm Springs, where it would get up to over 120 F on a regular basis.
There isn't anything that will keep your call cool in the noontime summer sun. Basically its just absorbing that 1400 watts per square foot and it'll warm up... (as a point of comparision, most toasters run 300-500 watts, and some hair dryers run about 1000 watts.... Now imagine 2 toasters, or a hair dryer on full on each square foot of your car....)
As pointed out, the best thing to do is keep the car out of the direct sunlight -- park it in the shade.
Secondly, your best option is to reflect some of the sunlight back -- using a light colored or reflective sunshade, first of all. Now, that jet black "Oakland Raiders" sunshade I saw the other day looked really neat, but I don't think its going to keep the car much cooler... Or you can go with a lighter colored car or upholstery -- but that's not an option if you already own the car.
Lastly, you can try to reduce the "greehouse effect" inside -- where the sunlight comes in, heats up the inside of the car, and the heat (IR) emitted by the sunlit interior of the car is trapped inside by the windows. If you crack a window or circulate the air somewhat, you can reduce this feedback effect.
I've seen several devices to do the latter, including a solar powered device that fitted on the moonroof and which used a solar panel and a fan to circulate the air --- but its not as effective as parking in the shade or covering the car. Putting a fan *inside* a sealed car, only allows it to heat more evenly....
Now what can you do to keep things inside a car from heating up? If you put things at the bottom of the car, in the shade, it will help some -- say in the footwell of the passenger seat. If you put them in an insulated container, say an ice chest, and put the ice chest out of the sun, it will reduce the heat on the ice chest, and the ice chest's insulation will help keep anything in it cooler, with or without ice. If you can't put it out of the sun, put some insulation on it (a blanket, for example) to reduce the heat soat from the hot air in the car, and put something reflective on top of that to reflect back some additional heat.
But in the end, if you leave it there for a couple of days, it will get hot. If you're worried about something getting hot and melting (like crayons or chocolate chip cookies) make sure to put them in a ziplock back or something like that. Even if they do melt, the crayons or cookies should melt at a lower temperature than the poly bag, and the damage will be limited. A couple of moments to look around the back of the car and see what's been left out can pay big time in minimizing meltage... An acquaintance of mine permanently fused a stick of "Dr Zogg's Sex Wax" to the front dash of his sports car one time. Now, Dr Zogg's is a popular wax used to wax the top of surfboards to improve your footting, so its pretty common to find. The name I guess, was someone's idea of marketing, but it works pretty well. But my buddy was in a hurry to get to the water, and zoomed away from his car towards the water leaving the flat tube of wax on his dashboard. Coming back at the end of the day, he found the tube of wax had melted and spread on his dash, and never managed to get it off.. He did scrape off the paper after getting ribbed about the "Sex Wax" on his dash a bit, and having his girlfriend's dad grill him repeatedly about this "Sex Wax Stuff" in his car....