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Heater for garage

GMCGarage

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Jan 31, 2017
Messages
1,264
Im looking for a electric in wall heater or wall mount for my garage. Just something to take the chill out, help melt snow on the cars, etc. I have a 20 amp circuit that I can use.
Anyone got a good suggestion?
 
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kelpaso1

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Sep 28, 2009
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New Brunswick
Get a minisplit. Way more efficient. My 12K BTU is on a 20 amp circut. Estimate it uses about $30/month in electricity in the cold winters here. I keep my 22x24 heated all the time.
 

Loose Nut Buster

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Apr 6, 2020
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Near my house in Houghton Lake MI
I find a 30k tank top radiant propane heater to be quite effective and use it in my 26x36 garage to bring it up to 40° quite quickly. However it/they do not operate with a thermostat.
I have mine plumbed from a 100# tank outside and connected inside via a hose to locate it to an area where I'm working until the garage warms some in severe cold temps. The torpedo style can be stat controlled but are loud IMO.

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u2slow

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Nov 20, 2011
Messages
3,585
Location
BC
Im looking for a electric in wall heater or wall mount for my garage. Just something to take the chill out, help melt snow on the cars, etc. I have a 20 amp circuit that I can use.
Anyone got a good suggestion?

If its 120V... any 1500W heater of your choice. Or, if you can find a heater with a 900-1000W output (or mode switch), you can possibly run two.

If its 240V... a couple cheap/used (free?) baseboard heaters and some kind of fan are likely your best bang for buck. You could have up to 3800W of heat that way.
 

Garagefffreak

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Dec 18, 2020
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15
Location
IL
If you decide to use some sort of a split system make sure that the outside temperature is within its operating range.. :)
 
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Loose Nut Buster

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Near my house in Houghton Lake MI
Think _safety & insurance_, propane is highly explosive and the vapors are heavy, also if its heated with any open flame source down lows, this why most garage heaters are suspended from the ceiling.

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u2slow

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Nov 20, 2011
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3,585
Location
BC
Also heat pumps are far more efficient than resistance heaters.

Tough to beat 100% efficiency of resistance heat.

Heat pumps may consume less electric energy to heat your space though.... :thumbup:
 

MDJR3312

Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2021
Messages
11
Location
Wallingford, Ct
I have tried electric wall heaters in my New England garage and they never seem to warm it up enough for me. Still gets uncomfortable and cold. I just recently purchased a Ridgid propane heater (if you would consider a propane tank) from Home Depot. Now I can ware a tee shirt in my garage its so warm. I highly recommend it.
 

pcmeiners

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Aug 13, 2009
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In the only town in Pennsylvania, Bloomsburg.
"Tough to beat 100% efficiency of resistance heat."

Yes resistance heater turn basically all wattage into heat but heat pumps produce more heat per watt as they are only transferring heat from one area to another, not creating heat. Heat pump will supply 30-50% more heat per watt than resistance heaters

Play with this calculator to see the difference.

https://www.seerenergysavings.com/afue-savings-calculator/
 

u2slow

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Nov 20, 2011
Messages
3,585
Location
BC
Yes resistance heater turn basically all wattage into heat but heat pumps produce more heat per watt as they are only transferring heat from one area to another, not creating heat. Heat pump will supply 30-50% more heat per watt than resistance heaters

Well aware of the cost difference. I'm highlighting the difference between energy-efficient and money-efficient. :beer:
 
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