navycop
Member
I was going to install an overhead space heater type thing in my shop. I have seen them in other shops such as mechanic bays. My question is: Will the dust from turning and sawing ignite the coils??
Rick, we have a portable one of those you just described. I am not sure we are using it correctly. We never feel any radiant hear yet know the coils are warm to hot. What is the theory behind these little guys.I have this one.......
http://store.h-mac.com/mohotdahd45b.html
I run it on propane and it has seperated combustion, fancy name for "it gets its air from outside." I run it for 45 min. on cold mornings and it knocks down the chill enough that I can then run my electric heat.
I absolutely love it but you'll go broke buying propane if you run it all day.:wink:
Rick, we have a portable one of those you just described. I am not sure we are using it correctly. We never feel any radiant hear yet know the coils are warm to hot. What is the theory behind these little guys.I have this one.......
http://store.h-mac.com/mohotdahd45b.html
I run it on propane and it has seperated combustion, fancy name for "it gets its air from outside." I run it for 45 min. on cold mornings and it knocks down the chill enough that I can then run my electric heat.
I absolutely love it but you'll go broke buying propane if you run it all day.:wink:
Nope, no fan. Mine must be a cheap rig.Rick, we have a portable one of those you just described. I am not sure we are using it correctly. We never feel any radiant hear yet know the coils are warm to hot. What is the theory behind these little guys.I have this one.......
http://store.h-mac.com/mohotdahd45b.html
I run it on propane and it has seperated combustion, fancy name for "it gets its air from outside." I run it for 45 min. on cold mornings and it knocks down the chill enough that I can then run my electric heat.
I absolutely love it but you'll go broke buying propane if you run it all day.:wink:
The theory is that it heats up the coils from the inside and then a fan blows over the top of the heated coils and produces heat. Do you have a fan on the back of yours? Mine throws out MASSIVE amounts of heat. My shop is 700 sq. ft. and on mornings when it's freezing outside I can heat the shop to 65 deg. in 45 min..
I should say that I keep my shop at above freezing (35 deg.) with my electric heat overnight and my propane heat is on a thermostat that comes on at 6:45 am and goes off at 7:30 am.
I use the oil filled radiator type electric heaters. I leave them on all the time on low at night in the winter and they keep the ambient temp very pleasant and are very safe.
Mythbusters did a thing about dust and starting a fire. They had an open flame and tried to get the stuff to light, and they were unable to create any type of fire/ explosion.
It's not impossible, I'm sure, but the chances of it happening are highly over-hyped.
to highjack this in a slightly different direction.
I'm thinking of getting one of the kerosene torpedo heaters. My concern is CO output. Is this something I need to be concerned with on a new unit. With my shop being in the basement, I'm not willing to take a chance with my family upstairs.
How's the odor, or should I opt for the propane version? (no chance of fuel spills that way).to highjack this in a slightly different direction.
I'm thinking of getting one of the kerosene torpedo heaters. My concern is CO output. Is this something I need to be concerned with on a new unit. With my shop being in the basement, I'm not willing to take a chance with my family upstairs.
According to the manual, there's minimal worry about that. They say it's safe for indoors use with minimal ventilation. They reccomend about 3 sq feet of ventilation per 100,000 BTU output. So for my little 45,000 BTU heater, I only need about 1.5 sq feet of ventilation. So I figured one open window will suffice.
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For a basement shop, I think it's a completely different story.... For safety's sake, either use a vented heating system or go with electric heating in the basement.
Something that I think should be emphasized is insulation. Insulation will make all the difference in the world. Some of you have said you can get your garage nice and warm in a matter of minutes with different heaters. You also say it cools off pretty quickly. When we built our current home we made sure the walls of the garage were well insulated. There is one outside wall and of course the garage door.
Does the dimensions matter also (lenght x width x height)?
I was wondering if the square footage of a shop made an impact on the size/amount of heat you got from a heater.Does the dimensions matter also (lenght x width x height)?
Not too sure what you mean by dimensions. Ours is a 2-1/2 car garage. We cut the insulating foam to fit in the garage door panels. They actually just pop into the frame. I could probably make it better with some of the insulating tape they use on HVAC duct work.
Mythbusters did a thing about dust and starting a fire. They had an open flame and tried to get the stuff to light, and they were unable to create any type of fire/ explosion.
It's not impossible, I'm sure, but the chances of it happening are highly over-hyped.
One word of caution burning kerosene puts out a ton of moisture which results in rust as I learned the hard way.
Well whatever a 2-1/2 car garage is 30 x 20 or so. Heated with two oil filled heaters, one on medium and the other on high. Nine degrees outside and it is 68 or 69 in the garage.