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Re: Just Another Day

To: Richard D Arnold <richard.arnold@juno.com>
Subject: Re: Just Another Day
From: Florrie & Allen Bachelder <bachldrs@swva.net>
Date: Sun, 7 Feb 1999 10:55:51 -0400
>Listers:
>
<<snip>>
>Garage is 30' wide by 24' deep, and it's 9'4" from the bottom of the
>rafters to the floor....
>I plan on insulating all the walls and ceiling, and wonder at how big a
>furnace I should plan on.  There was a used one in today's paper
>(allegedly 3 months old, hangs overhead, 50,000 BTU) for $495.00.
>
>Reasonable?  Too big?  Too small?
>
>Rich
>Council Bluffs, Iowa

Rich -

Not too big!!  My garage is 36 X 24 with an 8' ceiling.  It's all well
insulated.   I have a  40,000 BTU propane "jet" type heater.  On a typical
Appalachian winter day I'll find the temperature in the mid-20s (F) - it
takes the heater about 30 minutes to bring the temperature up to the
mid-50s.  Wearing insulated coveralls, I find this pretty comfortable and
after awhile I can turn off the noisy propane job and hold the temperature
for several hours with a kerosene heater.  But you're in Iowa, not
Virginia!  I lived in Minnesota for 34 years, so I still have a vague idea
what you're up against.

 You probably could get a 50-100,000 BTU jet-type heater from a supplier
like Northern Hydraulics for $200-300.  If you leave your garage unheated
much of the time as I do, the extra BTUs would be handy to bring the temp
up quickly for limited work-time. But these heaters are not as convenient
as the unit you describe - and in fact I'd be tempted to pay $495 for a
furnace like that.

For what it's worth ...

Allen


Allen H. Bachelder  =iii=<
Sinking Creek Home for Wayward MGs
New Castle, VA 24127
USA
540/544-7333



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