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Author: Subject: What do you use to heat your garage?
r1_pete

posted on 21/12/09 at 03:43 PM Reply With Quote
What do you use to heat your garage?

Its that time of year when the garage is the least inviting, I've tried several heating methods:

Portable gas fire - condensation problems.

Fan heater - didn't last long before it got run over.

Wood burning stove - looked nice but useless.

What do you use and with what success??






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blakep82

posted on 21/12/09 at 03:47 PM Reply With Quote
i've been looking at infra red/quartz heaters myself. no experience in them yet, but i think they'd be best.

you can get them on ebay for £30 all the way up to £130
don't know what the difference is though...





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whitestu

posted on 21/12/09 at 03:48 PM Reply With Quote
Just wear a vest!
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big-vee-twin

posted on 21/12/09 at 03:55 PM Reply With Quote
I use an electric door curtain, I permenantly borrowed from a Shop we refurbished - nice and warm and fan blows warm air all round garage - was in there all weekend no problem





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steve m

posted on 21/12/09 at 04:08 PM Reply With Quote
"Just wear a vest" and hard work
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wilkingj

posted on 21/12/09 at 04:10 PM Reply With Quote
Again I havent finished my Mother Earth Nature heater.
It runs on Waste or Sump Oil, and we all should have plenty of that.

I have seen simmilar ones running and they almost glow red hot when they are running at full blat. (or you can even put a secondary duct around the chimney and fan that hot air into the garage (leaving the chimney to exit thru the wall or roof)
Hope this is of use to someone:

Linky





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will121

posted on 21/12/09 at 04:17 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by blakep82
i've been looking at infra red/quartz heaters myself. no experience in them yet, but i think they'd be best.

you can get them on ebay for £30 all the way up to £130
don't know what the difference is though...


Infra red good in principal as heat you, only problem is the materials/tools etc will not absorb the infra red heat so will remain freezing to your touch resulting in cold hands, i just got a cheap 2kw fan heater for £8.95.
A infra red and fan heater may supliment each other well.

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rgrs

posted on 21/12/09 at 04:22 PM Reply With Quote
The quartz/ ir heaters will heat any solid object, what they don't heat is the air.

And no condensation issues either.

Roger

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MakeEverything

posted on 21/12/09 at 04:25 PM Reply With Quote
I wear surgical gloves, an army fleece (tight fit as was originally for under smock), Overalls and thick socks and steelies.

Lovely and warm today. Even laid an old rug on the drive while i took the sump off the car.
Could have lived under it today, i was that comfortable.





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flak monkey

posted on 21/12/09 at 04:28 PM Reply With Quote
As its locostbuilders and electricity is pricey....

Carpet the floor where you stand, saves your feet from the cold.

Wear another 2 layers under your jacket.

I spent all weekend out in the garage and when busy I didnt really notice it was cold TBH.





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tegwin

posted on 21/12/09 at 04:30 PM Reply With Quote
I used a massive electric infrared patio heater from focus... looked like a big spotlight..

It just seemed to make my head very hot... but didnt give much comfort... Its the skin vs cold metal that seems to be the worst part!





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Slater

posted on 21/12/09 at 04:42 PM Reply With Quote
I use thermal coveralls (padded) and a wooly hat if it's really cold! Sometimes I do a few star jumps to get the circulation going. Cheap and envioronmentaly friendly.





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mediabloke

posted on 21/12/09 at 04:44 PM Reply With Quote
I use a cheap fan heater. Compared the buying costs (which are easy to overlook) and running costs of some alternatives and it made sense. The heat is fairly directional, too, which is handy when you're working on something made of plastic...

Francis

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speedyxjs

posted on 21/12/09 at 04:51 PM Reply With Quote
I put a jacket on and try to keep moving
(not easy with the lack of space in there!)

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UncleFista

posted on 21/12/09 at 05:00 PM Reply With Quote









Tony Bond / UncleFista

Love is like a snowmobile, speeding across the frozen tundra.
Which suddenly flips, pinning you underneath.
At night the ice-weasels come...

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Irony

posted on 21/12/09 at 05:20 PM Reply With Quote
I have the perfect solution in a solid fuel burning stove. But alas cutting a hole through my tiled garage roof scares me pantless I must say. I thought that a gas fire might do the trick but today I got dripped on which worried me as I was unaware of the condensation problem.

What is the science behind this problem and why does it occur? Me noundestandy

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RK

posted on 21/12/09 at 05:24 PM Reply With Quote
Carpet as flak suggested. Smart boy that chap.
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Benzine

posted on 21/12/09 at 05:25 PM Reply With Quote
I'm interested in why gas heaters/hobs cause condensation.

I have a gas hob in my motorhome which causes bad condensation, and I have a woodburner which nukes the condensation Wood burners pwn for drying things out





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ironside

posted on 21/12/09 at 05:28 PM Reply With Quote
Burning hydrocarbons converts them into CO2 and H2O. The H2O is your condensation.
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sebastiaan

posted on 21/12/09 at 05:36 PM Reply With Quote
I use an 11kW space heater (gas powered). My garage is properly ventilated; no condensation issues thusfar.

Thought about electric heaters, but being limited to 3kW (fuse!) it didn't make much sense to me. The space heater gets it nice and toasty in 20 mins (300 sq.ft garage) and runs on (cheap!) LPG.

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coozer

posted on 21/12/09 at 05:54 PM Reply With Quote
DOH!






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1980 Z750

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Phil.J

posted on 21/12/09 at 06:00 PM Reply With Quote
I have a 27Kw oil fired space heater, the sort with a heat exchanger and ducted to outside, runs on the heating oil and cycles on a wall thermostat automatically.
One of my best buys at £260 from Ebay. Nice and warm with no condensation.
But as others have said if you dress for the cold you tend not to notice it.

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UncleFista

posted on 21/12/09 at 06:08 PM Reply With Quote
quote:
Originally posted by Irony
I have the perfect solution in a solid fuel burning stove. But alas cutting a hole through my tiled garage roof scares me pantless I must say.


Me too, so I cut the flue at an angle and rotated it 180 and welded it back together forming a 45 degree (ish) bend which goes through the hole I've knocked in the wall





Tony Bond / UncleFista

Love is like a snowmobile, speeding across the frozen tundra.
Which suddenly flips, pinning you underneath.
At night the ice-weasels come...

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mr henderson

posted on 21/12/09 at 07:29 PM Reply With Quote
Electric fan heater is all you need, as long as you get some insulation in there. that's the important part, not the heat. Get some good insulation and you will hardly need any heat at all.






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blakep82

posted on 21/12/09 at 08:07 PM Reply With Quote
i got an electric fan heater. all it did was blow warmed air at me, which then cooled down before it got to me





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don't write OT on a new thread title, you're creating the topic, everything you write is very much ON topic!

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