Hey everyone,
The old, beat up, used freezer I bought 4 years ago for $25 to get me into the keezer game finally gave up the ghost. I'm looking at the Insignia 10.2 cf at Best Buy for $240 to replace it, and finally do a nice looking keezer. On the old one I only put a simple 2x4 collar on it because anything more would have been overkill for such an eyesore of a freezer.
I'm curious what your thoughts are on sandwiching a 1" piece of foam board in between .75" boards vs a simple 2x collar and then attaching the pink foam board to it on the inside of the keezer. I like the idea of it sandwiched between the wood for no reason other than it would "look" better that way. But I don't claim to be a thermal engineer and would rather do it which ever way provides the best insulation for the inside of the keezer.
For those of you that have incorporated rigid foam board into your keezer collar, do you have any insight into why you you put it where you did?
The old, beat up, used freezer I bought 4 years ago for $25 to get me into the keezer game finally gave up the ghost. I'm looking at the Insignia 10.2 cf at Best Buy for $240 to replace it, and finally do a nice looking keezer. On the old one I only put a simple 2x4 collar on it because anything more would have been overkill for such an eyesore of a freezer.
I'm curious what your thoughts are on sandwiching a 1" piece of foam board in between .75" boards vs a simple 2x collar and then attaching the pink foam board to it on the inside of the keezer. I like the idea of it sandwiched between the wood for no reason other than it would "look" better that way. But I don't claim to be a thermal engineer and would rather do it which ever way provides the best insulation for the inside of the keezer.
For those of you that have incorporated rigid foam board into your keezer collar, do you have any insight into why you you put it where you did?