What kind of usage do those heaters go through? Like how many gallons per hour of heating? For the waste oil I mean.
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What kind of usage do those heaters go through? Like how many gallons per hour of heating? For the waste oil I mean.
It all depends on the btu(amount of heat it can produce).
What are you trying to heat?
Don't under any circumstances back feed your electric panel from a generator through an outlet !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Use a proper transfer switch unit !!!!!!!!!
...most need electricity for their ignitor, thermostat, and blower motor.
Unless/until I add a proper input feed setup to the panel, I will just run cords when needed. This is for short term use if it's too cold/hot outside. Long term, we're bugging out to a friend's with all the food ammo and guns packed in the rv.
That seems like a lot of oil to go through, but that's because I have no idea how much that costs. If it is something like a garage that isn't always hated and it costs aprox .08 cents an hour or something, that would be a good deal. Thanks for asking, I'm just curious is all.
That's 1 oil change per hour. You put a WTB on CL, or contact the local auto parts house. In 2 weeks you'd have enough oil to heat the garage all year. Depending the temp you want to keep it at. Now storing that much oil....................
My 730 sq ft garage gets to 55 after running the heater for 1hr, being insulated that temp is t-shirt weather. Turn the ceiling fans on with a small fan moving air across the floor , it's decent temp to be in.
An over head heater with fans on, pulling warm air already on the ceiling should be nice and warm at 30 minutes. Remember a heater isn't running 24/7. Dress warmer, have something on the floor to cover that cold sucking concrete, you'd be surprised how little it takes to keep the cold out.
Oh I realize all that, I've just never thought about what oil costs. Unless you're running a business out of your garage, you'd probably run it for very few hours compared to a home furnace.