Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,638 Threads: 23
Reputation:
15
Location: The village of Evenley
Car type: 1934 Austin Seven RP Deluxe
I’m just about to make an axle nut locking tool using a scrap brake drum and a length of thick wall steel tube and wondering how much it will cost to fire up the mig welder and weld it up!
My workshop of pretty nippy, I think I might carry on with the gardening instead...
Joined: Nov 2017 Posts: 562 Threads: 56
Reputation:
7
Location: West Yorkshire
Car type: Type 65 1934 + RP 1932
An LPG 15 kW heater from Screwfix is £100. 13kg Propane is about £35 (once you've got the bottle). Propane is 14kWh per kg, so standard 13kg bottle gives 182 kWh, which gives around 19p / kWh of controllable heat which doesn't smell.
Alterntively, install an air source heat pump with a coefficient of performance of 3.5:1, so an investment of a mere £8k or so provides you heat at "only" 9.8p/kWh!
On reflection John, a few rags soaked with E10 in a bucket in the corner is clearly the way to go if you're wanting to limit your capital investment!
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 3,379 Threads: 105
Reputation:
28
Location: Darkest Bedfordshire
I bought an electric fan heater and found it curiously ineffective unless you are standing right in front of it. My old Aladdin paraffin stove does a much better job of heating, though condensation is the downside / risk.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 2,396 Threads: 33
Reputation:
36
Location: Deepest Frogland 30960
Car type: 1933 RP Standard Saloon
For winter pottering I have a calor gas "Super Ser" butane heater which I blagged from SYP before I retired - even in my big garage it is enough to take the chill off on the days when I have to resort to a pullover.
In the summer I have a portable air-con unit that is vented to the outside. The Beardy Wizard Bloke can testify as to its efficacity.
Joined: Jan 2019 Posts: 1,564 Threads: 20
Reputation:
14
Location: Bala North Wales
Car type: 1933 RP Standard Saloon
I don't heat my garage. Given that the four winds of heaven appear to meet regularly inside, there is little point. Long johns, a good thick woolly, a heavyweight set of overalls, a body warmer (with lots of pockets for dropping bits and pieces in) and my trademark flat cap (it's surprising how much heat one loses from one's head) and I am as snug as a bug in a rug. Moving about is fun, though; it feels as if I am wearing armour.
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 1,531 Threads: 60
Reputation:
20
Quilted overalls. Available from any agricultural merchants for about £20-30
Charles
Joined: Aug 2017 Posts: 856 Threads: 73
Reputation:
10
I've just bought myself a heated gilet - a cross between a waistcoat and an electric blanket. It's not yet cold enough to tell how effective it is but first impressions are good. The battery life is shortish but apparently I can plug it in to a phone charger if I'm working at the bench for any length of time.