atourgates
Member
- Joined
- Dec 15, 2010
- Messages
- 24
I'm having a 44x60 shop (with overhangs on either side making it 60x60 total) built in north Idaho. The gravel pad is done, construction of the shop itself should start in the next few weeks (weather permitting), and I'm hoping to have it insulated (type if insulation TBD), with a concrete pad poured by the end of the summer.
I'm trying to decide what my best bet is to heat it.
The shop will be a combination of woodshop, vehicle parking and recreation space. Particularly on that last count, I expect it'll get more use in the winter than summer. So my plan is to heat it to between 50-60 as a "base temperature" through the winter, and then raise that as needed with either the main heat source (for non-radiant) or a supplemental heat source such as an electric blower or stove (if I go with radiant).
Our average high/low in the coldest months of the year is about 35/24, and we generally get about a week a year when nighttime temps get down to 0F or a bit below, but that's certainly not the norm.
We don't have natural gas (or the option to get it), and right now we pay $0.091/kWh for electricity, and Propane costs us $2.03/gallon. We're planning to add grid-tied solar to the shop's roof at some point (and will be wiring it with that in mind), but that could be several years off. The shop will have its own 200 Amp service.
Insulating, and adding PEX to the 4" concrete floor would add about $10k to the shop's cost, and the boiler and mechanicals from Radiantec would cost right around $4K whether I go with a propane or electric boiler. So, about a $14K initial cost for Radiant.
Using the fuel cost per gallon calculator here, I get the results that per 1-Million BTUs, electricity would cost me $26.67, and propane would cost $26.07.
With that close of a price difference, I'm inclined to go towards an electric boiler since propane would require either a 2nd tank (still researching the rental/installation charge from our utility there), or a 100+ foot run from our existing tank.
The other option I've seen recommended, but don't fully understand, is the option of a ductless mini-split heat pump. It seems like 2x 24,000 BTU units might be enough for the space, which I could get for $4K all-in, considerably cheaper than the initial purchase price of a radiant system.
So, beyond any general advice you might have, I'd love to know:
I'm trying to decide what my best bet is to heat it.
The shop will be a combination of woodshop, vehicle parking and recreation space. Particularly on that last count, I expect it'll get more use in the winter than summer. So my plan is to heat it to between 50-60 as a "base temperature" through the winter, and then raise that as needed with either the main heat source (for non-radiant) or a supplemental heat source such as an electric blower or stove (if I go with radiant).
Our average high/low in the coldest months of the year is about 35/24, and we generally get about a week a year when nighttime temps get down to 0F or a bit below, but that's certainly not the norm.
We don't have natural gas (or the option to get it), and right now we pay $0.091/kWh for electricity, and Propane costs us $2.03/gallon. We're planning to add grid-tied solar to the shop's roof at some point (and will be wiring it with that in mind), but that could be several years off. The shop will have its own 200 Amp service.
Insulating, and adding PEX to the 4" concrete floor would add about $10k to the shop's cost, and the boiler and mechanicals from Radiantec would cost right around $4K whether I go with a propane or electric boiler. So, about a $14K initial cost for Radiant.
Using the fuel cost per gallon calculator here, I get the results that per 1-Million BTUs, electricity would cost me $26.67, and propane would cost $26.07.
With that close of a price difference, I'm inclined to go towards an electric boiler since propane would require either a 2nd tank (still researching the rental/installation charge from our utility there), or a 100+ foot run from our existing tank.
The other option I've seen recommended, but don't fully understand, is the option of a ductless mini-split heat pump. It seems like 2x 24,000 BTU units might be enough for the space, which I could get for $4K all-in, considerably cheaper than the initial purchase price of a radiant system.
So, beyond any general advice you might have, I'd love to know:
- Would you recommend forced air, or radiant heat?
- With radiant, is an electric boiler a reasonable option given my propane/electric costs?
- Are there other good options I'm not considering?