2059
Well-Known Member
- Local time
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- Joined
- May 4, 2012
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- Location
- North Central Indiana
How to heat a shop is always "Hot" topic.... (see what I did right there?, Huh..Huh...) Anyway, Over the years I've talked to soooo many guys about this and it boils down to a couple things.. 1st; the only 100% efficient heat is Electric Radiant. Meaning that all the energy spent to produce the heat stays in the bldg. No air make-up, no exhaust. With todays technology we are getting more out of every WATT and BTU...
At work, one of my support facilities (~250,000 sq/ft) has floor radiant heat. We chose that because it is a lamination facility and requires strict temperature and humidity controls. (It's though to control humidity if you have air make-up pouring into the bldg.). The only issues there are; we MUST keep it to temperature (70*+) ALL the time and, Maint has to be very careful when installing/moving equipment when anchoring down. In the manufacturing plants; (~22 Plants at ~65,000 sq/ft each) we use Natural gas fed Thermo cyclers. (A floor mount commercial forced air piece that cycles the ambient) We use them because we have better control over the ambient temperature for the entire bldg. and if we need extra heat at the exit/entrance overheads, we use an Natural gas fired inferred radiant heat tube.
Now the polar opposite... In my shop man cave. I removed the radiant electric because they were spinning the meter off the wall and installed one, shop length, LP gas fired inferred radiant tube. Clearly, I couldn't install in-floor as it was an existing shop. I'm not fond of forced air for the reasons started previously. I like radiant heat because it heats the objects in the area (Benches, Cars, Tools, floor, etc.) which then heats the air. I keep the shop at 55*-60*ish and keep the humidity between 10-30% (Humidity control is HUGE when it comes to comfort). I spend about $110/month for LP (depending on $/gal.) to heat the 30X60 shop 14' ceiling.
Ones location will play a big part in the type of heating device used. Upper mid-west will be different than southwest/east. You may want to talk to some HVAC installation tech's (NOT the salesmen) in the area to see what they "like/have" for themselves....
Good luck ! Keep us posted...
At work, one of my support facilities (~250,000 sq/ft) has floor radiant heat. We chose that because it is a lamination facility and requires strict temperature and humidity controls. (It's though to control humidity if you have air make-up pouring into the bldg.). The only issues there are; we MUST keep it to temperature (70*+) ALL the time and, Maint has to be very careful when installing/moving equipment when anchoring down. In the manufacturing plants; (~22 Plants at ~65,000 sq/ft each) we use Natural gas fed Thermo cyclers. (A floor mount commercial forced air piece that cycles the ambient) We use them because we have better control over the ambient temperature for the entire bldg. and if we need extra heat at the exit/entrance overheads, we use an Natural gas fired inferred radiant heat tube.
Now the polar opposite... In my shop man cave. I removed the radiant electric because they were spinning the meter off the wall and installed one, shop length, LP gas fired inferred radiant tube. Clearly, I couldn't install in-floor as it was an existing shop. I'm not fond of forced air for the reasons started previously. I like radiant heat because it heats the objects in the area (Benches, Cars, Tools, floor, etc.) which then heats the air. I keep the shop at 55*-60*ish and keep the humidity between 10-30% (Humidity control is HUGE when it comes to comfort). I spend about $110/month for LP (depending on $/gal.) to heat the 30X60 shop 14' ceiling.
Ones location will play a big part in the type of heating device used. Upper mid-west will be different than southwest/east. You may want to talk to some HVAC installation tech's (NOT the salesmen) in the area to see what they "like/have" for themselves....
Good luck ! Keep us posted...