Hey folks, I'm getting ready to purchase a heater for the shop and am wondering which type would be best for a heat source. Both heating oil and propane are readily available around here, cost per gallon of propane is going to be slightly cheaper than oil will be.
Previously we had a wood stove in here, but between having to deal with keeping it stocked and the fire hazard of using it in an old barn with a makeshift chimney was a recipe for disaster, so I did away with it a few years ago. Last year I installed an oil heater that we had floating around that came from a house originally, so I've already got the oil tank and vent system set up. However towards the end of the season the internal blower fan went out on it, and after tearing into it came to the conclusion that for the ~$800 in parts it wasn't worth repairing since it is pretty old, and is only 40,000 BTU.
There is a second set of doors inside the shop that used to get closed during the winter so as to only have to heat the front portion of the shop ~1000 square feet, but this time around I am shooting for heating the entire 4000 square foot area. Ceiling is about 11', most heat loss will occur in the upwards direction since the shop is built into the hillside and is essentially underground on 3 sides. The flooring into the upstairs storage area is quite thick and tightly fit, but I'm sure there is still significant heat loss occurring in that direction.
So I'm looking at units in the 125,000 BTU range. Does this sound adequate for the application? Back on the subject of propane versus oil, which one is going to realistically be more efficient to use for a space this large? Seems as though the initial cost for an oil unit is at least half again as much as that of a propane unit.
One propane heater I am considering is this one linked below, it has the intake coming in from outside rather than inside the shop, and a stainless steel heat exchanger which from my limited research sounds like it will last longer.
https://www.acwholesalers.com/Modine-HDC125SS0121/p48353.html
Any thoughts on this subject would be greatly appreciated to help me come up with the best solution! Thanks!
Previously we had a wood stove in here, but between having to deal with keeping it stocked and the fire hazard of using it in an old barn with a makeshift chimney was a recipe for disaster, so I did away with it a few years ago. Last year I installed an oil heater that we had floating around that came from a house originally, so I've already got the oil tank and vent system set up. However towards the end of the season the internal blower fan went out on it, and after tearing into it came to the conclusion that for the ~$800 in parts it wasn't worth repairing since it is pretty old, and is only 40,000 BTU.
There is a second set of doors inside the shop that used to get closed during the winter so as to only have to heat the front portion of the shop ~1000 square feet, but this time around I am shooting for heating the entire 4000 square foot area. Ceiling is about 11', most heat loss will occur in the upwards direction since the shop is built into the hillside and is essentially underground on 3 sides. The flooring into the upstairs storage area is quite thick and tightly fit, but I'm sure there is still significant heat loss occurring in that direction.
So I'm looking at units in the 125,000 BTU range. Does this sound adequate for the application? Back on the subject of propane versus oil, which one is going to realistically be more efficient to use for a space this large? Seems as though the initial cost for an oil unit is at least half again as much as that of a propane unit.
One propane heater I am considering is this one linked below, it has the intake coming in from outside rather than inside the shop, and a stainless steel heat exchanger which from my limited research sounds like it will last longer.
https://www.acwholesalers.com/Modine-HDC125SS0121/p48353.html
Any thoughts on this subject would be greatly appreciated to help me come up with the best solution! Thanks!
