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chrisscholz
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 104 iowa
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2008-02-05          151118

I am building a morton pole barn: 36'W x 56'L x 12'H, and may insulate in the future. Where is the best place to buy a LP radiant tube heater, about 30'-40' long? Is $750 a respectable price? How have others insulated the walls? I thought about Bat insulation, or putting up netting and blowing fiberglass in the wall cavity. (Deep walls would take a lot of insulation.$$$$) I can finish the ceiling myself with steel panels, vapor barrier, and blown-in fiberglass.

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hardwood
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 3583 iowa
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2008-02-05          151119

Chris: Unless you have already contracted with the Morton folks, go price a conventional frame building on a stem wall. Use OSB for the sheathing on the sidewalls and conventional vinyl siding and a common shingle roof. I just did this and you will be surprised at how little diference there is in the cost between the two. Insulating between 2X6 studs is so much easier than insulating a pole shed with steel siding. I used conventional barn steel installed horizontaly across the studs for an inside liner, easy as pie. Frank. ....

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earthwrks
Join Date: Dec 2003
Posts: 3853 Home Office in Flat Rock, Michigan
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2008-02-06          151137

Franks's right. I have all the heavy equipment to build a standard pole barn but wouldn't even consider it unless I used conventional stud walls. You can literally build the walls and sheath them on the ground and just tip them up. And since you will be building on a raised concrete floor, wood rot of poles in the ground are not an issue. Aorund here (Detroit area) treated poles will only last about 25-30 years.

And don't even consider using metal on the ceiling if you paln on heating it. The moisture from your body combined with your breath and the moisture in the air coming from the air and the floor will cause water droplets to form on the steel. ....

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hardwood
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 3583 iowa
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2008-02-06          151139

Perhaps a little better description of my building starting from the outside toward the inside is as follows. First the vinyl siding, plastic house wrap,1/2 in. OSB, the 2X6 studs with paper back fiberglass in between, 1 1/2 in. foam board, visqueen, then the steel liner. My celing is paperback insulation between the rafters. the roof is a conventional ahingle with rafters centered on 24 in. I did'nt price the diference between barn steel lining and sheetrock, but shetrrock likely would cost less. I used steel for two reasons, first, part of my shop is used as a welding and machine shop, so fire is always a concern. Second the insurance company does not require a steel liner for shops but highly recommends it. The cost difference between the pole shed and a conventional stud wall building which included the cost of the cement stem wall was actually just a tick less than a pole shed, both turn key, both bids from the same firm. This is before any insulation or liner costs on either building. Hope this helps. Frank. ....

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kleinchris
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 269 Westminster, Texas
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2008-02-07          151151

Chris- to answer you question... if I was doing this myself, the first place I would look would be Northern tool. I am looking at doing something similar in the future so I have been pricing a propane unit and then somekind of wood burner to get rid of all my scrap. If they don't have exactly what you are looking for, they will probably have something close. ....

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hardwood
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 3583 iowa
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2008-02-07          151153

Chris: I forgot to answer your question about the radiant heaters. I've used electric radiants in the past, and they work fine, but have never used the gas fueled radiants. The new shop I'm speaking of now has a conventional LP forced air furnace with central air conditioning, it works well too. Frank. ....

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firtree
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 6 Wisconsin
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2008-02-08          151177

best way to heat is in floor heating. Yes, it is more expensive initially, but the comfort levels will beat anything out there. Make sure to use lots of insulation- much cheaper than gas etc.
good luck with your project
....

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kwschumm
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 5764 NW Oregon
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2008-02-08          151179

There's little doubt that in-floor heating would be the most comfortable way to go, but I don't think it's well suited for a shop or barn unless you spend an awful lot of time in the building. It's expensive to keep a barn heated 24/7 so you'd want to set back the temperature when you're not in there. With in-floor heating it takes forever to heat up or cool down so it wouldn't be like you could walk in the barn, turn up the t-stat and be comfortable in 15 minutes.

A combination sort of heat would probably be an excellent compromise. Use in-floor to keep the building heated to 50 degrees or so and use another to bring it up to temperature quickly. But buying two heating separate heating systems is expensive. If budget is no object that would probably be the best combination of economy and comfort.

If budget is an obstacle then money may best be spent on a heating system that would automatically keep the temperature above dewpoint during unoccupied periods and respond quickly when you walk into the barn to spend time working. ....

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Murf
Join Date: Dec 1999
Posts: 7249 Toronto Area, Ontario, Canada
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2008-02-08          151182

In areas like Iowa where it sometimes gets cold, it's also a necessity to leave in floor heating going for the whole winter, if only at a low setting.

The heating/cooling of the floor caused by intermittent use of it would cause the frost to play real havoc with the slab and footings.

Best of luck. ....

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firtree
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 6 Wisconsin
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2008-02-08          151190

we keep our 30x48'shed at lowest setting at 50 degrees near Fond du Lac, WI. In 24 hrs we can have it to 65. If the shed is well insulated with an R-19 door, insulated windows and R-50 in ceiling, with an efficient gas heater and pumps, I think it is still cheaper than to heat with forced air.

You couldn't wrestle that heating system from me. Clean, no drafts, no heat lost when you open door- heat stays in slab.

Solar gain from south facing windows also help raise heat in the winter. ....

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kwschumm
Join Date: Feb 2003
Posts: 5764 NW Oregon
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2008-02-08          151196

Firtree, do you have any estimate of what it costs to run the heating system in your building? ....

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firtree
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 6 Wisconsin
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2008-02-08          151200

this is our first year with the shed. We had to refill approx 250 gals of propane, but we had the heat set to 65 degrees from 10/20 - 12/20 for the season. I have not looked at the propane gauge lately... ....

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hardwood
Join Date: Dec 2002
Posts: 3583 iowa
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2008-02-09          151206

Firtree; I do have to agree with you that an electriclay heated hot water floor system is more effecient than a forced air LP system. The electric/furnace/AC man we used came armed to the teeth with data to prove this point. I still chose the LP forced air for the following reasons. I don't work there everyday, so I keep the temp at about fourtyfive, but can have it to 55 or 60 in a half hour. Air conditioning was just as if not more important to me than heat, so both systems could be installed as one inside unit with a regular compressor outside. If it were to have been a fulltime comercial shop, then yes I would have did as the contrator and you have suggested. Frank. ....

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nosteiner4me
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 113 ohio
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2008-02-10          151212

chris...Just a thought....how long do you intend to use the barn, 24/7 and does in need to be heated 24/7 in winter or just when you are in it. I have a gas furnace in my house but i heat my house 24/7 in winter with an add on wood furnace. It blows out max (160,000) btu and gets my house 70-73 no problem even at 10 below or so( I heat 5600 sq ft). My main furnace will kick on at 66 degrees or whatever i set it to. You can also add on a water jacket to heat water and run through a heat exchanger to heat whatever else you wanted. ....

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chrisscholz
Join Date: Oct 2003
Posts: 104 iowa
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2008-02-21          151543

Nosteiner4me,

I plan on heating the building only when I am working on equipment, or when the kids are playing basketball. I thought about heating a small portion where my diesel JD3520 will rest. Although, it was 15F yesterday, and she started after a few tough tries. I may look at putting an inline heater on the tractor that I could plug in. So in summary, I think the LP radiant tube heater is my best bet. I may add a basic wood stove some day. ....

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