Hey all, been lurking a while now and finally have something to post about. Some help please for the new guy? 
Garage details:
Detached, 28’x32’x9’, 2x4 construction
Batted fiberglass insulation, R13 in the walls, R19 in the ceiling
Completely finished with 1/2” drywall
2 8’x10’ insulated doors, I estimate R7 but not 100% certain
No windows, 1 solid man-door
If it matters, soffit and eave vents, planned ridge vent upon new roof in the Spring
Central Missouri climate, nothing too extreme here but we do have rather high humidity. Temps can hit single digits and low 100s but typically don’t stay there longer than a couple days. The building currently has a conventional natural gas furnace that was converted to propane. Conventional metal ducts straight down the center of the ceiling.
I’d like to explore the option of swapping to electric heat. Propane is expensive and this thing seems to burn through it way too quickly (no pun intended). Plus the deliveries tend to tear up the yard. It’d be nice to set the thermostat to 35* in the winter and leave it without having to monitor the tank level. Natural gas is not available in my area.
One of my friends gave me an old (but working) electric furnace he ripped out of a rehab home he was working on. I could potentially just put that one in wanted to consider other options.
I’ve read some discussions on minisplits and thought that maybe it’d be a clean option to get a bit more overhead clearance from the duct removal. AC would be nice but it’s not a requirement, I’d be more interested in the humidity control I think.
The garage is fed by a 100A (240v) subpanel branched from the house’s main 200A service. Low power requirements would be preferred, as the house is already all-electric (furnace,dryer,stove,water heater).
What would you do?
Garage details:
Detached, 28’x32’x9’, 2x4 construction
Batted fiberglass insulation, R13 in the walls, R19 in the ceiling
Completely finished with 1/2” drywall
2 8’x10’ insulated doors, I estimate R7 but not 100% certain
No windows, 1 solid man-door
If it matters, soffit and eave vents, planned ridge vent upon new roof in the Spring
Central Missouri climate, nothing too extreme here but we do have rather high humidity. Temps can hit single digits and low 100s but typically don’t stay there longer than a couple days. The building currently has a conventional natural gas furnace that was converted to propane. Conventional metal ducts straight down the center of the ceiling.
I’d like to explore the option of swapping to electric heat. Propane is expensive and this thing seems to burn through it way too quickly (no pun intended). Plus the deliveries tend to tear up the yard. It’d be nice to set the thermostat to 35* in the winter and leave it without having to monitor the tank level. Natural gas is not available in my area.
One of my friends gave me an old (but working) electric furnace he ripped out of a rehab home he was working on. I could potentially just put that one in wanted to consider other options.
I’ve read some discussions on minisplits and thought that maybe it’d be a clean option to get a bit more overhead clearance from the duct removal. AC would be nice but it’s not a requirement, I’d be more interested in the humidity control I think.
The garage is fed by a 100A (240v) subpanel branched from the house’s main 200A service. Low power requirements would be preferred, as the house is already all-electric (furnace,dryer,stove,water heater).
What would you do?