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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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The direct flame heaters like the classic bullet heaters are only for
temporaty use. The chemistry combustion will tell you that for every gallon of fuel you use, you will nearly a gallon of water vapor (exact ratio depends on exactly the hydrocarbon you are burning) My 115k BTU kerosene heater uses a gallon an hour, puts a gallon of water into the air. It's not a big issue for the center of the garage, the tools sitting in the far corner tend to get rusty. Not too mention the issue of Carbon Monoxide poisoning if your burned is misadjusted or malfunctioning. I've had it once, survived the experience, it was NOT fun. The infra red gas heaters have the same issues, you are pumping water into the area, you are not venting the fumes outside. Since the building is built, skip the in floor hydronic heat. Nice and even but hard to retrofit. You are left with forced air or tube infra red. Both are good, the forced air warms the air, makes it nice to work. Infra red warms the equipment, you will still want to wear a vest. consider getting a used home furnace. tear outs are common as folks upgrade to higher effiency units. I've seen 5 year old units show up on www.craigslist.com in the free section. $50 to $100 should get you an 80k btu unit with 80% effiency. Use a standard plennum on top, fix up 2 or 3 8" round ducts a few feet long to get some air flow to the areas you want. RainLover wrote: hey everyone, Winter's right around the corner and after 2 years without studio heat, I MAY finally be able to do something about it. I have a 1,500 (30' x 50') sf studio with 17' high ceilings (Quonset hut, so only the peek is that high) I've been leaning towards a propane tank outside and one of those propane-powered shop heaters mounted up on an end wall. Are these the best way to go? any other suggestions? I've seen the Infrared heaters in home centers and costcos... are they more efficient? Cost is a factor for me. Thanks, James, Seattle |
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