Do they have any non-open flame? aka Electric?T-shirt and blue jean "weather" is a good shop temp.
For all intents and purposes its 2022. Live a little and have an HVAC shop install some type of heater. My vote is Space-Ray but I own two and love 'em.
Causing nothing but grief trying to run jobs in cold temps.
scratch that, my dad just told me those are sealed heaters and ok for indoors,. ill look into it< thanksDo they have any non-open flame? aka Electric?
Sealed combustion is the reason I got them. I occasionally paint cars, motorcycles and work with thinners and solvents. Can't afford to have a fire or explosion.scratch that, my dad just told me those are sealed heaters and ok for indoors,. ill look into it< thanks
gotcha, thanks! ill be looking into one of those.Sealed combustion is the reason I got them. I occasionally paint cars, motorcycles and work with thinners and solvents. Can't afford to have a fire or explosion.
Maintenance so far consists of blowing the dust off the tubes for heating season.
The oldest unit has got to be approaching 30 years. Newest about 25 years.
There are electric unit heaters too, but heating a shop with electric anything will consume any profits.
Kinda like my old TIG welder. Costs about 9 bucks an hour for electricity.
Am a small operator, built a new little studio this winter and went with 6" walls, vaulted ceiling and heavy duty insulation. Two computers running constantly just about keeps it comfortable in cooler temps. No regrets.Look into better insulation too.
I have a setup at home in my garage, and its un heated... Last winter I needed 3 radiant heaters to keep the temp up in there... I put some reflectix over the door and now 1 radiant heater on medium makes it hotter in there than my house... and it's about $5 a month to run on medium.
Find your drafty areas - insulation foam is like $10 a sheet for a 4x8. Even if you still need a heater... if you're able to add some insulation it will cut your electricity bill down by quite a bit.