How do you keep your garage warm for repairs?
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vjaneczko
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How do you keep your garage warm for repairs?
I'm planning on doing some repairs this winter but the garage is unheated and I'm wondering if anyone has suggestions/experience for heating a three car, non-insulated stand-alone garage. I’d like to avoid an electric heater ‘casue I don’t believe the cost-to-BTU ratio is good – but I could be mistaken. So I was thinking of the tank that fires-up the Weber grill but concerned about ventilation. If there’s one thing I hate, it’s being cold and working on a car – but I hate dying of asphyxiation even more!
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1997 855 GLT - R.I.P.
2006 S60R - For ME!
- billofdurham
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Propane heater.
One thing I have found that helps keep the garage warm is to recycle old carpets by using them on the garage floor. I just lay them on top of each other so now we are four carpets thick. One neighbour has told me that my garage is better carpeted than any room in his house.
Bill.
One thing I have found that helps keep the garage warm is to recycle old carpets by using them on the garage floor. I just lay them on top of each other so now we are four carpets thick. One neighbour has told me that my garage is better carpeted than any room in his house.
Bill.
Work was good - retirement is better.
1996 850GLT 2.5 20v Estate Manual.
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Previously:
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1987 744GLE, Manual, Green.
1991 960 3.0 24v, Auto, Silver.
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1996 850GLT 2.5 20v Estate Manual.
1995 Peugeot Boxer 2.5Tdi Autosleeper.
Previously:
1984 244DL, Manual, Beige.
1987 744GLE, Manual, Green.
1991 960 3.0 24v, Auto, Silver.
1994 940T Wentworth, Auto, Blue.
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jblackburn
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My parents have an old kerosene heater I drag down from the attic if I need to do anything in the winter. It heats up the small one-car garage side of the garage pretty well after an hour or two.
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2016 Chevy Cruze Premier
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mercuic: Long live the tractor motor!
2016 Chevy Cruze Premier
A learning experience is one of those things that says, "You know that thing you just did? Don't do that."
mercuic: Long live the tractor motor!
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fazool
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no no and no
Open flame heaters should never be used in a garage.
Garages are closed rooms, without designed-in ventilation. Your car carries 20 gallons of evaporating explosive fluid.
Three dangers exist:
1) fire/explosion - exposed flames plus gasoline supply
2) suffocation/poisoning/CO - flames eat up the oxygen in a closed space
3) burns - heaters in bad locations with exposed parts
The only RIGHT way to heat your garage is to have non-exposed heater pump heat in. The absolute best is to use how water (household baseboard heat) or a dedicated ventilated outside furnace.
That all said, the cheap easy solution is a portable sealed oil heater. These are small portable devices (you can get one at Walmart for <$50 in the housewares department). They look like a home water radiator on wheels. They have electrical heating coils inside them but are filled with oil to transmit the heat. There are no exposed flames, no exposed electrical elements.
Mine is a 1200watt. Its not enough to heat the whole 2-car garage but I turn it on in the morning and it raises the temp a bit, then I put it near where I am working and it makes the garage workspace quite comfortable.
Open flame heaters should never be used in a garage.
Garages are closed rooms, without designed-in ventilation. Your car carries 20 gallons of evaporating explosive fluid.
Three dangers exist:
1) fire/explosion - exposed flames plus gasoline supply
2) suffocation/poisoning/CO - flames eat up the oxygen in a closed space
3) burns - heaters in bad locations with exposed parts
The only RIGHT way to heat your garage is to have non-exposed heater pump heat in. The absolute best is to use how water (household baseboard heat) or a dedicated ventilated outside furnace.
That all said, the cheap easy solution is a portable sealed oil heater. These are small portable devices (you can get one at Walmart for <$50 in the housewares department). They look like a home water radiator on wheels. They have electrical heating coils inside them but are filled with oil to transmit the heat. There are no exposed flames, no exposed electrical elements.
Mine is a 1200watt. Its not enough to heat the whole 2-car garage but I turn it on in the morning and it raises the temp a bit, then I put it near where I am working and it makes the garage workspace quite comfortable.
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Fish stick88
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Yes the fire hazard exists. But cost effectively, that is about your only option, we heated a 30-30 room with a 75g propane tank (bigg sucker) for about 5 hours, returned to the same room and we were fine. Recommendations for fire protection is a minimum of 3 feet in all directions. Just some idea's wall mounted electric heaters are what do me good.
Speed has never killed anyone, suddenly becoming stationary... That's what gets you.
'94 850 Sedan - 160k miles
'94 850 Sedan - 160k miles
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nepersonne
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I actually find the halogen work lights I use to see heat things up nicely! And a long sleeve (old) jacket rounds things out.
+1 on the no open flame heaters.
+1 on the no open flame heaters.
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Fish stick88
- Posts: 543
- Joined: 24 June 2010
- Year and Model: 1994 - 850 Sedan
- Location: Iowa
One thing I didn't mention, and it sounds a bit silly. But have a Hot/Warm bucket of water outside in the garage, put a garbage bag over the top, and push your hands in it. (garbage bag between hands and water) As odd as it sounds. The water will actually heat up your hand 6 times faster than if you were to let them "air warm" I have a heated garage. At the golf course I work at we have a cold storage unit where we do work in, and in the morning it dips down to the 50 degree range, which over time gets really cold!
hope that helps too!
hope that helps too!
Speed has never killed anyone, suddenly becoming stationary... That's what gets you.
'94 850 Sedan - 160k miles
'94 850 Sedan - 160k miles






