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Heating BTU Requirements?

Gunnert

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 30, 2011
Messages
64
Trying to figure out how big a propane unit I need. Detached garage interior is 33 x 28. Walls are 10' (8' insulated with fiberglass under tongue/groove 3/4 plywood and 2' is concrete block). I have a two-post lift with the ceiling height peaking at 19'. The ceiling was insulated this week with 6-8" spray foam.

My calculations tell me I need 45k BTU to heat the garage. But, I'm wondering with the benefits of the foam insulation if I only need 30k-35k. I'm doing my heater shopping on Craigslist and would hate to pass up a 35k heater if it would do the job.

What do I really need to heat the garage? Thanks!
 
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Kev442

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 15, 2009
Messages
5,386
Location
Wi
Depends on whether you are going to maintain steady temperatures or want a 20-30 degree temp rise in one hour when you hit the go button from stone cold. You also have no location listed. There is a big difference in heating BTU needs between SD and AR.
 
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StingRay

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 26, 2006
Messages
1,340
Location
Saskatoon,SK. Canada
It really depends on how cold it gets and your average r values in the walls and ceiling. The recovery rate desired and the number of air changes per hour can also be considerations. I have a 28 x 44 with R 52 in the attic and 3 in of foam in the walls. I have two 9x8 r6 doors, one 8x16 r14 door and 6 double glazed windows. It's a stick frame building with a 10 ft ceiling. A 60k unit heater is just enough to heat the whole shop even in harsh Saskatchewan winters. When it gets really cold below -30 I try to close off half the shop to save on heat and the cold side still stays quite warm anyway.
 
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