I've been looking at some 220V electric heaters to heat my garage when I'm working on the bikes. Anyone have recommendations on garage heaters?
I've been looking at some 220V electric heaters to heat my garage when I'm working on the bikes. Anyone have recommendations on garage heaters?
John
KTM Duke 690
It's not a 220v, but I have had great luck with the Diesel/Kerosene portable forced air shop heaters. It's also nice those times when you need to do some work outside and can keep your hands unthawed .
http://www.harborfreight.com/catalog...nfered+Radiant
Any of the above will work. As for using any of these or the suggestion above inside your garage . PLZ be careful . Burning of Diesel or Kerosene will create fumes and or Carbon Monoxide. The ones I have listed wont create the fumes but will still do the C. M.
I use the duel burner in the link above on a 30 gal tank.
Trying to stay away from any fuel burning heaters. I would do a nat gas heater but this place is a rental, so something electric and portable. I want something that I can leave off most of the time and will heat the garage quickly. I don't think any radiant heaters will fill that bill.
John
KTM Duke 690
I SOOOOOO regret getting rid of my kerosene forced air heater - that thing was the shit!
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I stayed in rustic cabin at 10k ft last month, and it had an old Mont Ward 220V heater that ‘bout cooked me out of the place. That’s what I’m after but the reviews I’ve been reading of specific models have been very mixed.
John
KTM Duke 690
I use a propane Convection heater that I got a Lowes. It's over 80,000BTU's and can take my garage from 25 degrees in the dead of winter to about 80 degrees in roughly 20 minutes when on high. I don't like working in a sweatshirt or bibs and got sick and tired of it. So when I need to work on the truck or bike in the dead of winter. I crank up the heater. Once I get it hot enough, I usually just turn it down to low and it keeps the garage at 70 degrees the whole time, even with the door cracked for ventilation.
In my opinion, electric heaters are a waste of money in that they cost you money to run. Propane is way cheaper and I can get a 20lb bottle to go for a long time when just using it sporadically. I know mine is rated at 48hrs on low for a full 20lb tank. Which isn't alot considering the amount of heat you can generate but compare a fill up at ACE Hardware for $12.95 to your electric bill during winter.
As with what others have said, Kerosene/Diesel force air heaters rock. The only drawback to those is the most I've seen have to have electric in order to run the fan. The Convection heater I got is all propane and requires no power. Has a striker to start the flame.
Here you go:
http://www.lowes.com/pd_245179-88644...ction%2Bheater
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For you guys running fuel heaters, how do you vent the exhaust? I am in a condo and the only option is opening the single garage door which well.. kind of defeats the purpose. Crack the door and run a hose from the heater to outside?
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"So live your life so the fear of death can never enter your heart. Trouble no one about their religion; respect others in their views, and demand that they respect yours. Love your life, perfect your life, beautify all things in your life. Seek to make your life long and of service to your people. Prepare a noble death song for the day when you go over the great divide."
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I agree that electric will cost way more than propane. I'll look at those.
John
KTM Duke 690
I got the propane heater that BK recommended and very pleased with it so far. It rocks 50k BTU on low and will heat the garage in 25 minutes. I haven’t needed to turn it up to high…..80k BTU! As for venting, I do have a roof vent in the attic that’s a straight shot from the garage. I’m using a CO detector and it has not gone off, nor have I noticed any effects while working in there. Best use for this heater is for short periods to warm up the garage so you can work.
Also, found an good source for propane. AAA Propane sold me a used charged 20 lb. tank for $34 (they are $30 new empty at Lowe’s). Refills are $17 and the fourth fill is free. They are at 44th and Wads and another close to 303Cycle. http://www.aaapropane.com/
John
KTM Duke 690
Good buy man!!
The other cool thing about that heater too is it will handle from 20lb tanks to 100lb'ers. Which I know some of the smaller heaters won't unless you run a fuel filter inline.
I fired mine up the other day as I was cleaning stuff up in the garage and it got it roasty toasty very quick and that was on low. Only times I've used it on high, is dead of winter.
You can't go wrong with it and you'll stay warm for sure.
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"So live your life so the fear of death can never enter your heart. Trouble no one about their religion; respect others in their views, and demand that they respect yours. Love your life, perfect your life, beautify all things in your life. Seek to make your life long and of service to your people. Prepare a noble death song for the day when you go over the great divide."
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Samsclub has a 1200W (2 x 600W heater coils) 110V garage heater system for $69. I am SO tempted to get one. I don't like burning propane in the garage.
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2002 Yamaha WR250F
I have a hand-me-down 600 + 800w heater that does just fine for a 3-car garage in the middle of winter. 1400 to start her off, then 600 or 800 to maintain good temp. It sucks down more electricity than the block heater for my truck, but for brief stints it's nice.
So the non-gas route, Ricky's suggestion should be sufficient....although I bet you've already bought something by now.
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