To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

heat

grnova

Member
Joined
Jun 12, 2005
Messages
24
Location
Crown Point Indiana
I am alittle stumped :headscrat on what size hot dawg or( any other ) heater to buy I have an 864sqft garage with 11' ceiling any suggestions. I am using natural gas.

Tim
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Hairy Dog

New member
Joined
Oct 16, 2005
Messages
3
Location
Ohio
I'd go with the 75,000 btu.

Just put one in my 32' x 28' and it does a very good job.

Heats it up in a hurry.

Hairy Dog
 

MyMopar

Active member
Joined
Sep 29, 2005
Messages
39
Location
Connecticut
I went with the HD 60 for mine. 2 bay oversize with loft, ceiling height is 14' & 22'. It also heats my side workshop.
 

RonBou

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 17, 2005
Messages
224
Location
Farmington, CT
I put a 60,000 BTU in my 2 car garage and it is rated for a 3 car which is approx 864 sq ft. A 75,000 unit may be a little overkill but if you ever expand your garage you won't have to replace the heater.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

355ss

Member
Joined
Apr 2, 2005
Messages
8
Location
Iowa
I have 1200 sqft w/ 10.5 ft ceilings and I was able to heat it with 30000 btu's to 70 degrees inside and -10 degrees outside. My heater was still cycling so I had excess heat capacity. But it took about 45 minutes to raise the temp from 50 to 70. It all depends on insulation, infiltration, temperature difference and ramp rate. This year I have replaced my old unit with a 60,000 hot dawg just to lower the amount of time it takes to raise the temp. The more you oversize the unit the more it will cycle on and off.
 

dboat

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 20, 2005
Messages
372
Location
Dallas, Tx
355ss said:
I have 1200 sqft w/ 10.5 ft ceilings and I was able to heat it with 30000 btu's to 70 degrees inside and -10 degrees outside. My heater was still cycling so I had excess heat capacity. But it took about 45 minutes to raise the temp from 50 to 70. It all depends on insulation, infiltration, temperature difference and ramp rate. This year I have replaced my old unit with a 60,000 hot dawg just to lower the amount of time it takes to raise the temp. The more you oversize the unit the more it will cycle on and off.

Agreed, I have a 30k btu, ventless in mine. i keep it at about 50 degrees and didnt really need to raise it during last winter.. I do have to run a dehumidier though. My garage is fairly tight, well, for a garage.
Dana
 

DaveL.

Well-known member
Joined
May 26, 2005
Messages
337
Location
Pennsylvania,HBG area
My garage is 1200 sq ft.,9 1/2 cieling. I called a Modine factory rep and he sized mine (HD75) 75000 btu. I'd say an HD60 would suit you fine. Make sure to insulate your cieling to at least R-30.

Dave
 

mwh

Member
Joined
Apr 11, 2005
Messages
5
Location
champaign
Krooser,

Did you you do the install yourself on that heater? Did you pipe the inlet/exhaust horizontal or vertical?

Thanks,
Marc
 

krooser

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 3, 2005
Messages
2,377
Location
Waupaca, Wisconsin
I've got a 30', 80K radiant tube heater. Simple install..I did it myself with a little help from my friends.

I'd use the RE series...REAL simple...hang it high and it will cover the shop floor pretty good. 30 to 45K btu's should be enough....

I had to shorten my heater this year as I walled off one third of my shop...just took it down, sawed off two feet of the tube a re-hung it.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom