08-27-2021, 04:58 PM | #1 |
Registered User
Join Date: Jun 2015
Location: Carlos MN
Posts: 2,136
|
New shop radiant heat
The plan for next spring is building a new house and shop.
Shop will by 48 feet wide x 40 feet deep. Work shop area will be 24 feet x 40 feet deep. 8 or 9 foot walls. Not going to do in floor heat. I'm considering either forced air or radiant heat. Leaning towards radiant heat. I haven't had radiant heat in a shop. Any advice would be great. |
08-28-2021, 11:15 AM | #2 |
Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Temple City
Posts: 3,633
|
Re: New shop radiant heat
I have dabled in radiant heaters, but they are not terribly efficient. But they can be used in a smaller area which is nice. A worm tube or drywall heater in my opinion is better since they are more directional.
I live in the LA area, and do commercial hvac. I see the stuff, but you live in the Great white north. One option to consider is hydronic heating. You use a recirc pump off of a hot water heater through a coil with a blower motor. It is very efficient, but seriously drags in recovery time. Meaning if you turn it on when you need it. It is going to be a few hours before it is warm. Where as it is very effective to turn on, and just leave on. Especially in a shop. Set it at 50*, and let it roll. That way a sweater is comfortable to work in. Just use aqua pex to run the lines with decent sweeps when turning. Copper with 90's will pin hole in several years, and be annoying. |
09-02-2021, 12:57 PM | #3 |
Registered User
Join Date: Mar 2021
Location: Stoon, SK
Posts: 27
|
Re: New shop radiant heat
I live in the great white north, and went with radiant heat in my shop. I chose that way because of the heat recovery time in the winter and nat gas is cheap. My heater is 40ft long so there is good heat distribution down the center of my shop. When i was researching i read that radiant heats up the objects, instead of heating up the air then blowing it around using FD. That was also taken into account. When i leave the shop in the winter turn heat down to 42. When i go in turn i turn it to 65 and its there in 15mins. Thats my 2cents
|
09-11-2021, 06:18 PM | #4 |
Registered User
Join Date: Jan 2012
Location: Motown
Posts: 7,680
|
Re: New shop radiant heat
Smart man to partition the building into a space you can heat. My 50*50 barn has a 20*30 shop I heat all winter. I chose a used 80+% house propane forced air furnace cuz the old dairy barn has 8 foot ceilings and the furnace was cheap. Going on 20 years with propane, I like the instant on heat, I keep the thermostat on 45° and turn it up to 65° when I'm out there. I have 1" foam and sheetrock on the walls and 8" blown in cellulose overhead. Detroit area
__________________
cool, an ogre smiley Ogre's 58 Truk build how to put your truck year and build thread into your signature shop air compressor timer |
09-13-2021, 10:09 AM | #5 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2014
Location: Eagle, ID
Posts: 3,067
|
Re: New shop radiant heat
I've been thinking about this topic recently. I was contemplating a radiant floor heating system, but I don't have it in the budget, and it would take a while to save up. I was looking at using a pellet stove in my shop.
|
09-13-2021, 02:48 PM | #6 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2014
Location: Wenatchee, Wa
Posts: 934
|
Re: New shop radiant heat
Quote:
The pellet stove would be cool I love wood heat. |
|
09-15-2021, 07:57 AM | #7 | |
Registered User
Join Date: Jul 2019
Location: Beebe, AR
Posts: 2,475
|
Re: New shop radiant heat
Quote:
I have been using some kerosene heaters in my shop but just bought a couple tank top radiant heaters for propane bottles. Figure I'll use them more and the kerosene less this winter.
__________________
1967 C10 1980 Jeep CJ5 2020 Toyota 4Runner 2024 Toyota Tundra |
|
09-29-2021, 11:27 PM | #8 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: Reno, Nv.
Posts: 1,440
|
Re: New shop radiant heat
We took out the propane furnace and put in an used oil furnace. Works great. Shop is 40' X 50'
__________________
1927 Willy's Knight 24,000 original miles, 1958 Impala 283/Powerglide, 1971 Monte Carlo 350/350, 1972 GMC K2500 350/350, 1976 Chev. K10 350/350, 2006 GMC Sierra 2500HD LBZ Duramax/Allison, 2006 Chev. Silverado K3500 LBZ Duramax/Allison |
Bookmarks |
|
|