czar800
Mastermind Approved!
- Local time
- 4:27 PM
- User ID
- 533
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2016
- Messages
- 7,167
- Reaction score
- 37,472
- Location
- Ellwood City

I live north of Pittsburgh
++You, my friend, are juggling LIVE hand-grenades if you have gas cans and wood stoves in the same building. Gasoline is highly flammable, meaning a small leak can give fumes that travel 20-feet across a room FLOOR, and ignite, flashing fire across the room like backdraft (the movie); (the same reason that water heaters in a garage are put 18" off the floor). I would (recommend) building a separate doghouse to store gas/ flammables/ chainsaws/ mowers in. That is what I did, 4x8x 4-5ft high, double doors, vented, on blocks, away from shop. Personally, i have had paint remover cans and gas cans unexpectedly start leaking onto a floor; fortunately, I had no flame source at the time.
- Alternately, put flammables in a milk crate/s and take it outdoors when working with wood burning. p.s. I know of a house/ garage/ boat/ car that burned when a guy took 8-day old wood ash in a paper bag to his garage one night... they all lived...
Makes me want to dig out the math, but first impression is you would get more heat out of a 100w incandescent, than out of that solar, LOLAs to the 2 northern tool solar heaters,the BTU out put on the big one is 900BTU's and the small one 518 BTU's.At the low end my coal stove puts out about 6000 BYU's and that just helps on days in the 50's outside in an insulated home.You go below 50 and these things would be nice to look at but not much good.Seems awful expensive for a heater that may be no more then a novelty heater.And on overcast days around here it would not even work.
In my shed I use 1 or 2 torpedo heaters.One runs on kerosene and one on propane.I am not saying that these are the best but either works for me.An old kerosun type heater would also work.
Hope not in that location, with no flue to outside; asking for carbon monoxide poisoning. Sorry if I (seem) overbearing, but I am a retired Safety Officer, and ex-Scout Leader. We had a parent (30-yr ago) of a new cub scout on 1st camp out climb into his pickup w/ a propane heater one cold night, and he was found dead the next morning.electric wont heat my little shed so i burn wood or coal in this
View attachment 4997
The hazard of gasoline/ flammables fumes++You, my friend, are juggling LIVE hand-grenades if you have gas cans and wood stoves in the same building. Gasoline is highly flammable, meaning a small leak can give fumes that travel 20-feet across a room FLOOR, and ignite, flashing fire across the room like backdraft (the movie); (the same reason that water heaters in a garage are put 18" off the floor). I would (recommend) building a separate doghouse to store gas/ flammables/ chainsaws/ mowers in. That is what I did, 4x8x 4-5ft high, double doors, vented, on blocks, away from shop. Personally, i have had paint remover cans and gas cans unexpectedly start leaking onto a floor; fortunately, I had no flame source at the time.
- Alternately, put flammables in a milk crate/s and take it outdoors when working with wood burning. p.s. I know of a house/ garage/ boat/ car that burned when a guy took 8-day old wood ash in a paper bag to his garage one night... they all lived...
Plenty on the internet; anything specific you want?got any more info on that scary gasoline?
Put a fan behind it to move air around, it's what I used to do to heat my room when I was a kid. Worked very well.I think I will give one of the oil filled ones a shot.
I think I will give one of the oil filled ones a shot.