With fall coming I am thinking about winter and want to add some radiant heat to my toolbox to keep my tools warm in my detached garage. Where I live, cold temperatures can run from the end of October until the middle of March. Sometimes nighttime temps can drop to -10 or -15 in Dec and January, but the garage temp usually does not go below freezing for very long due to the thermal mass of the concrete floor. I can stand cool temperatures and I do have a propane heater for the coldest days. But when my tools are cold I can hardly hold them for any period of time and it takes away any enjoyment of working on my cars.
My toolbox is a Snap-on KRL 1023. It is 28" deep and 72" long. There is room to lay a mat in the bottom underneath the drawers and I could drill a small hole to run a power cord inside. My garage is very large (4,200 sq. ft.) so heating the whole thing is not an easy option.
I am looking for ideas and products that I maybe haven't thought of. What I have seen are either low power seed starter mats, which I like because they are low power, very thin and come in a size that approximates the size of the toolbox. The potential problem is that they do not put out that much heat. The other choice is a couple of foot warming mats. These are thicker and put out more heat. I don't know if it would be too much heat, which might dry out the grease on the drawer slides over time or do some other damage.
I would like to let it run 24/7 during the coldest months of Dec - Feb.
Ideas?
My toolbox is a Snap-on KRL 1023. It is 28" deep and 72" long. There is room to lay a mat in the bottom underneath the drawers and I could drill a small hole to run a power cord inside. My garage is very large (4,200 sq. ft.) so heating the whole thing is not an easy option.
I am looking for ideas and products that I maybe haven't thought of. What I have seen are either low power seed starter mats, which I like because they are low power, very thin and come in a size that approximates the size of the toolbox. The potential problem is that they do not put out that much heat. The other choice is a couple of foot warming mats. These are thicker and put out more heat. I don't know if it would be too much heat, which might dry out the grease on the drawer slides over time or do some other damage.
I would like to let it run 24/7 during the coldest months of Dec - Feb.
Ideas?


