Inflatable car cover

Author
Discussion

turbomoggie

Original Poster:

174 posts

111 months

Yesterday (12:14)
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Hi everyone,

Our garage is a bit damp and I'm worried about my R32 Skyline GTR rusting in there. I'm hoping to do some work on the garage to improve this, but this will probably be summer 2025. I'm looking at getting a carcoon type cover. Space is very very tight in the garage already so I think it's going to have to be one of the fully inflatable models (rather than the freestanding units which have rods in to keep them expanded even without the fans running).

Does anyone have any advice? I was going to go ahead and order a Carcoon but the recent reviews and feedback is making me feel a bit hesitant (I've also recently tried calling and emailing them with a query and neither have been answered). Are there any good quality alternatives? Any advice from anyone otherwise about these covers?

Thanks!

Super Sonic

7,299 posts

61 months

Yesterday (12:17)
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If the damp is in the air, covering your car won't keep the damp out. In fact it could make it worse due to lack of ventilation. Condensation will settle on your car in the morning, but won't evaporated in the daytime.

Gericho

550 posts

10 months

Yesterday (12:21)
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You could run a dehumidifier in your garage and may not need a car bubble at all. Some info here https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

I sugggested using a dehumidifier tub as a starting point (see link in the thread posted)

turbomoggie

Original Poster:

174 posts

111 months

Yesterday (13:01)
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There's plenty of ventilation - the back door allows plenty of air to pass through around the frame and there's a few gaps between the roof and walls on the sides which allow air to circulate but don't allow rain in. The main issue is that one of the side walls of the garage is bordering my neighbour's garden. Their ground level is higher than ours. So the wall of the garage on their side gets wet/damp when it rains.

Eventually I would like to use some tanking slurry or something on that side to try and stop the water passing in to the garage.

I think the garage is too "leaky" to use a dehumidifier - its not sealed well enough.

MarkwG

5,104 posts

196 months

Yesterday (13:29)
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I have a carcoon I use outside: works fine, if you have the space it should be fine inside. I'd be sure there are no protruding sharp points that could pierce the skin as it inflates, otherwise it should do what you need it to.

blueg33

38,542 posts

231 months

Yesterday (13:52)
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I used to use an outdoor carcoon and put a dehmidifier inside it. Worked very well.

Hippea

2,152 posts

76 months

Yesterday (13:59)
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Has anyone used a carcoon in a barn without power? Wondering if you can run them off a car battery?

andy43

10,598 posts

261 months

Yesterday (14:30)
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Oh. I thought this was an insurance question.

oobster

7,246 posts

218 months

Yesterday (15:48)
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MarkwG said:
I have a carcoon I use outside: works fine, if you have the space it should be fine inside. I'd be sure there are no protruding sharp points that could pierce the skin as it inflates, otherwise it should do what you need it to.
Any pics Mark?

MarkwG

5,104 posts

196 months

Yesterday (17:48)
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oobster said:
MarkwG said:
I have a carcoon I use outside: works fine, if you have the space it should be fine inside. I'd be sure there are no protruding sharp points that could pierce the skin as it inflates, otherwise it should do what you need it to.
Any pics Mark?
Don't think so - I'm not using it this year, made other arrangements. I'll have a hunt through just in case.

Miserablegit

4,173 posts

116 months

Yesterday (18:05)
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Hippea said:
Has anyone used a carcoon in a barn without power? Wondering if you can run them off a car battery?
The old ones used to be able to do that- they had a connection to the battery which trickle charged the battery - if mains power was lost the battery then powered the carcoon fans but I think they might have changed this to avoid batteries going flat.
It’s fairly simple to run the carcoon from a battery rather than the mains but will require a cable to be made up.

swisstoni

18,185 posts

286 months

Yesterday (19:30)
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They are very good for fighting condensation by constantly changing the air. I have 4 cars living in airchambers (the framed versions) and even the brake disks show no rust after months.

turbomoggie

Original Poster:

174 posts

111 months

Yesterday (23:36)
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Thanks for the opinions everyone. I think I'm going to order one.