I live up in Maine, so our winters can be pretty rough...
I'm building a new home in a few months time, It's going to be a 50x28 ranch on a sloped lot with a drive under garage from the right side. The garage will be around 26x26 or so. I've been thinking about doing radiant heat in the floor of the garage, just to keep it at bearable temperatures in the coldest months of winter to work on the sled (45-50). The house will have standard baseboard heat. The garage itself, being part of the house footprint will probably stay at a decent temperature anyway (hopefully).
My dilemma is, I know people that have a standard oil boiler, with an extra zone included for the garage. This setup is extremely easy, and adding on the radiant PEX lines to the system is very cheap. The hot water would be off a standard heat exchange water tank using a boiler zone to pump the hot water through it.
I don't really feel like messing with wood, but are there any alternatives (no on road natural gas, this is somewhat rural) to an oil burner, that would be somewhat efficient, but not cost me too much of an arm and a leg up front? I know I'm going to hate heating the house and garage with an oil boiler, but it may be my best option. Will the radiant heat in the garage burn a hole in my pocket?
Any help from the HVAC experts is much appreciated.
Zach
I'm building a new home in a few months time, It's going to be a 50x28 ranch on a sloped lot with a drive under garage from the right side. The garage will be around 26x26 or so. I've been thinking about doing radiant heat in the floor of the garage, just to keep it at bearable temperatures in the coldest months of winter to work on the sled (45-50). The house will have standard baseboard heat. The garage itself, being part of the house footprint will probably stay at a decent temperature anyway (hopefully).
My dilemma is, I know people that have a standard oil boiler, with an extra zone included for the garage. This setup is extremely easy, and adding on the radiant PEX lines to the system is very cheap. The hot water would be off a standard heat exchange water tank using a boiler zone to pump the hot water through it.
I don't really feel like messing with wood, but are there any alternatives (no on road natural gas, this is somewhat rural) to an oil burner, that would be somewhat efficient, but not cost me too much of an arm and a leg up front? I know I'm going to hate heating the house and garage with an oil boiler, but it may be my best option. Will the radiant heat in the garage burn a hole in my pocket?
Any help from the HVAC experts is much appreciated.
Zach