Gene in NC
01-03-2006, 08:28 PM
Location Raleigh, NC.
With a little help from Grainger catalog the formula for BtuH to heat a closed space is: cubic ft. x 0.133 x (desired temp - ambient in structure) = BtuH.
Actual will vary by amount of outside air entering. Attached garage may benefit a bit from heat loss from residence.
My garage is 22 x 20 plus a 10 x 10 work area x 9 ceiling =
4,860 x 0.133 x (70 - 30) = 25,855 BtuH. Getting reasonable warm up time may need another 10k BtuH. Assume 30 degree day or temp commonly not much below 30 deg. by 24:00 hrs which is longer than I can last.
Grainger had a 35,000 kero Dayton unit for $159 in 2000 cataloog. Home Depot has, if I recall correctly. 15,000-25,000 propane for $159 plus, I assume, propane tank. Kero would get complaints from "the house".
Have had some success with heat from the house. Mud room, laundry, half bath area has two hot air registers With closed door to the house, open door to garage, set strong fan inside the door, set furnace blower to on, and temp level improves considerably. Have tried 10k BtuH kero heater but didn't help much and exposed to odor. May go with electric supplemental.
Example of justification is: Shop hours for strut replacement on e34 is 5 x $60 or higher plus full "shop retail" on the parts. Non BMW shop wants $600 for e34 struts.
To do, we have 2 x e34 struts, 1 e28 for upper control arms, 1 e30 for driveshaft, 2 Chev trucks for brakes, 1 '76 2002 for complete driveline strip to go into '73 2002 restoration , 1 e28 535 with mystery start but not run, etc. Also have '68 2002 that would make a good drivers school car.
But, the most important project is repair/restore '66 Boston Whaler 17 that must be ready for departure 3/31/06 from Wilmington, bound for Key West via the ICW. Why this March? Because I'm running out of Springs.
With a little help from Grainger catalog the formula for BtuH to heat a closed space is: cubic ft. x 0.133 x (desired temp - ambient in structure) = BtuH.
Actual will vary by amount of outside air entering. Attached garage may benefit a bit from heat loss from residence.
My garage is 22 x 20 plus a 10 x 10 work area x 9 ceiling =
4,860 x 0.133 x (70 - 30) = 25,855 BtuH. Getting reasonable warm up time may need another 10k BtuH. Assume 30 degree day or temp commonly not much below 30 deg. by 24:00 hrs which is longer than I can last.
Grainger had a 35,000 kero Dayton unit for $159 in 2000 cataloog. Home Depot has, if I recall correctly. 15,000-25,000 propane for $159 plus, I assume, propane tank. Kero would get complaints from "the house".
Have had some success with heat from the house. Mud room, laundry, half bath area has two hot air registers With closed door to the house, open door to garage, set strong fan inside the door, set furnace blower to on, and temp level improves considerably. Have tried 10k BtuH kero heater but didn't help much and exposed to odor. May go with electric supplemental.
Example of justification is: Shop hours for strut replacement on e34 is 5 x $60 or higher plus full "shop retail" on the parts. Non BMW shop wants $600 for e34 struts.
To do, we have 2 x e34 struts, 1 e28 for upper control arms, 1 e30 for driveshaft, 2 Chev trucks for brakes, 1 '76 2002 for complete driveline strip to go into '73 2002 restoration , 1 e28 535 with mystery start but not run, etc. Also have '68 2002 that would make a good drivers school car.
But, the most important project is repair/restore '66 Boston Whaler 17 that must be ready for departure 3/31/06 from Wilmington, bound for Key West via the ICW. Why this March? Because I'm running out of Springs.