It took me two days of work, but I was finally able to achieve neutral thermal inertia on my Tiny Home.
I started out with some pretty wide temperature swings, from here on out, all temps stated in (f) and not (c) just so everyone knows. I was flucuating pretty wildly between 44 and 33 degrees, the later being the threshold in which I worried about my
water pipes freezing and had to start a fire in the basement. This was not only costly, but a pain to do since I had to run down cellar constantly, displaying things in our 'closet" since in this tiny house, the cellarway doubles as a closet too.
The first day of labor took 4 hours, and consisted of placing
hay all around the parimeter of the house. This immenslely helped, and the temperature stabliized for its 44-33 swing, down to a more 40-33 swing. It was better, but still not nearly
enough; it required a fire in the basement when things got below 10 degrees ambient temperature outside.
So yesterday I put a roll of R-19 commercial insulation around the rim joists of the house. To my surprised, there was just insulation backing stapled up and no real insulation so the cavities were all voids. It took a broomstick handle in a lot of places, to shove insulation into inaccessable spots, but the difference was dramatic. It lowered the overall temperature on the high side by 2 degrees down to 38, but lifted the low temperture up to 38. In other words, the basement now stays at a constant 38 degrees.
This is great news because Maine has been in the news for being the coldest temperature on earth on Thanksgiving, some -3 degrees. IF I can maintain 38 degrees with ambient temperatures that low, then it would have to be -20 degrees out before I near the 33 threshold and have to start a fire in the basement. This saves a lot of work all the way around.