Ok fair enough. Back to pellet stoves i guess hahaHoly puck
Ya I'm broke azzz lol
Ok fair enough. Back to pellet stoves i guess hahaHoly puck
Ya I'm broke azzz lol
Yes , possibly full time and will have a hoistUnless you are working in it full-time and always on the floor in floor heat is just too pricey and not worth it, you still need other heat as recovery is way too slow after opening doors. If heaters are pointed properly the bottom 3' is fine. Renting shop space, it's 80x55 with 2 forced air heaters and it's only a bit cold by overhead doors as they are old, not one bit cold working on the floor, and this is a 60 year old block building with 24' ceilings.
If you have access to natural gas heat it that way so you can turn the thermostat on and not worry about a thing, trying to save a few hundred a month in heating costs isn't worth it. However if price is such a big concern might be worth waiting until some costs drop back down, wasn't long ago a 40x80 complete finished inside with about 800 sq/ft finished mezzaine with bathroom, etc was $200k. The open ends don't make sense either imo, a lot of extra cost for very little benefit.
Yes , possibly full time and will have a hoist
So hopefully very little on the floor
I'll price it both ways , the open sides was just for all my crap , not to be out in the weather
And making a separate pole shed and a shop would be way more money I would assume
Travel trailer , enclosed trailer , quads , sleds , tractor , back the truck under with sleds on the deckDefinitely wouldn't consider infloor heat with a lift it is insanely pricey, probably $30k at least. What sort of stuff? If it's only covered on top it's not providing much shelter and no security. I bet if you cut that space in half you could build it in shop space for the same amount, and with high ceilings mezzanine on one part gives a ton of extra room. Or as one person suggested make it one shop and section off one space to leave unheated, but in reality if you insulate it well and keep temp at even 10c it's not much money to heat.
Stupidest bunch of BS I've ever heard & was told. In floor heats tool boxes, equipment, anything in your shop, the floor etc....warm...........& the air cools down.....who the PHK cares? Floor is warm & ever thing you touch.So thought of in floor , but the recovery time , compared to hot air blowing is off
Cycles on crack. In floor heat! Never beat!Ya anyone who says floor heat is not the best has been hittin the crack pipe hard. My 40x60 floor is 24c. Ice blocks warm up pretty fast. Im able to work on things within 30 min and not have frozen hands.
Stupidest bunch of BS I've ever heard & was told. In floor heats tool boxes, equipment, anything in your shop, the floor etc....warm...........& the air cools down.....who the PHK cares? Floor is warm & ever thing you touch.
In floor heat recovers because everything in the shop becomes a radiator when the door closes. Not only is the concrete warm but all the objects in the shop are warm. A fan to circulate air is all that is required. If you want top performance install a high efficiency unit heater 1/4 the size the shop would require solo. Unless your running a jiffy lube and opening 16' doors every 30 min then it's not required.In-floor heating is for houses and people with "shops" who 90% never work in them but love telling everyone they have in-floor heat. No offence to anyone with it, it's just become this thing that people like to brag about with so many, compared to actually being a benefit. Visit ANY shop who works on chit everyday and virtually none have it and couldn't careless about it. Why? It's expensive as chit and you still need another heat source, only you can downsize it but the cost won't be much different. Yea if you want to go with both it will be awesome but the cost won't. Add in the fact that you better hope at -40 it doesn't crap out or the lines will break and now you're fawked. The floor drying faster? With a properly sloped floor and air movement it will dry in no time.
In floor heat recovers because everything in the shop becomes a radiator when the door closes. Not only is the concrete warm but all the objects in the shop are warm. A fan to circulate air is all that is required. If you want top performance install a high efficiency unit heater 1/4 the size the shop would require solo. Unless your running a jiffy lube and opening 16' doors every 30 min then it's not required.