SandburRanch
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2010
- Messages
- 1,418
- Tractor
- NHtd75
I find your gas vs electric cost link to be on target for my area and that's why I'll be heating the house with electric again this winter.
anything like this will help conserve $.No mater how you heat I would figure a way to block off the up stairs from the main floor. All of your heat will end up in the upper floor area.
Dan D.
They can be found fairly easily. Even a radiant propane heater off a 20 lb. cylinder would work, just have adequate ventilation.I bought a used mobile home furnace to heat my garage. You can find them that burn oil or gas fairly cheap. I have my T-stat set at 45 just to keep anything from freezing. Raise it to 55-60 when I have work to do in there.
Save the electricity for the welder and the power tools! listen to this guy!Im an electrician...end even I picked a propane heater.
In my particular situation, i usually only run the heater for 20-40 minutes to take the chill off of my 30x40 shop. That will raise the temp from below freezing to the 70F range. Then i can work for hours in the shop without the heater running. If i had an electric unit, it would take alot longer to heat up. My gas unit is 125,000 BTU.
Some day ill insulate the rest of my shop....but ive been saying that for 10 years.
Where im at its 6.5 cents per KWH. but in the shops where ive wired electric heaters (im an electrician) all the units the people purchased were far too small for their shops. Most places sell a 5,000 watt heater ( 30 amp @ 240 volt) unless you special order, and this size unit would need to run an awfully long time to heat a 20x30 shop.
using this site Heater Calculator - Heater Store - BTU Calculator - Watts / BTU Conversion - Determine Your Heater Size
using your size bldg, average insulation wanting a 40F rise in temp, this site tells me youd need a 18,750 watt heater....for 64,000 btu of heat. Thats like 80 amps...yeiks. I guess a couple of 5,000 watt heaters might work if your not in too big of a hurry to heat it.
My ultimate goal is a wood burning fireplace.......its in the works. I have 20 acres of free wood.
Thanks for all the input guys.
We do have propane on the property already, but it is a buried tank and is 250'+ away from the shop, so I'd likely need a second tank. Not really worth it in my opinion.
No, you'd run a line from the tank to building , then a regulator, then wherever you want.