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#1
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bottled gas greenhouse heaters?
Is anyone using a greenhouse heater with gas bottle supplying it,if so how
long do the bottles last?I am thinking of buying a 4.2 kw greenhouse gas heater with hose & regulator instead of 2kw electric heater which I have just received electric bill for 120 quid for two month ouch! -- Thanks Keith,England,UK. |
#2
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Hello Keith
not sure about the running costs but I am certain that I have read somewhere that the burning gas gives off fumes that are harmless but are beneficial to the plants in the form of foliage feed. ....................Leslie "keith ;-)" wrote in message ... Is anyone using a greenhouse heater with gas bottle supplying it,if so how long do the bottles last?I am thinking of buying a 4.2 kw greenhouse gas heater with hose & regulator instead of 2kw electric heater which I have just received electric bill for 120 quid for two month ouch! -- Thanks Keith,England,UK. |
#3
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keith ;-) wrote:
Is anyone using a greenhouse heater with gas bottle supplying it,if so how long do the bottles last?I am thinking of buying a 4.2 kw greenhouse gas heater with hose & regulator instead of 2kw electric heater which I have just received electric bill for 120 quid for two month ouch! How hot are you keeping the greenhouse? My annual bill for greenhouse heating was never more than £200 annually for a 20x10'. More than paraffin but without all the ventilation, refueling and condensation problems. Use bubblewrap over all the interior glass, create a curtain inside the door so that only the blind end of the greenhouse is heated. Then set the thermostat to keep a temperature of 5C and have a hot box for anything that is really touchy or just take it indoors. I presume you are heating your greenhouse almost continuously with 2kW to get that sort of immense bill. Most days it has actually been above 5C this winter - so only on a few days should active heating have been needed at all. OK you may be growing Madagascan wotsits at 20C min temp but then you should have your greenhouse designed to much higher insulation standards. Regards, Martin Brown |
#4
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Hi Martin,You presume right! I am keeping my 10 x 8 greenhouse to around 15c
24/7 for growing orchids.The greenhouse is green aluminium ,I have put 4 ft close board fence panals around the out side so the bottom half is clad & inside has bubble wrap ,apart from the double door end. I will have to insulate between the cladding & glass.And think of a way of insulating the double door end(two 2 ft wide sliding doors)with 2ft glass panes either side. This is my first winter with the greenhouse so its a learning curve! Its an expensive hobby. -- Thanks Keith,England,UK. "Martin Brown" wrote in message ... keith ;-) wrote: Is anyone using a greenhouse heater with gas bottle supplying it,if so how long do the bottles last?I am thinking of buying a 4.2 kw greenhouse gas heater with hose & regulator instead of 2kw electric heater which I have just received electric bill for 120 quid for two month ouch! How hot are you keeping the greenhouse? My annual bill for greenhouse heating was never more than £200 annually for a 20x10'. More than paraffin but without all the ventilation, refueling and condensation problems. Use bubblewrap over all the interior glass, create a curtain inside the door so that only the blind end of the greenhouse is heated. Then set the thermostat to keep a temperature of 5C and have a hot box for anything that is really touchy or just take it indoors. I presume you are heating your greenhouse almost continuously with 2kW to get that sort of immense bill. Most days it has actually been above 5C this winter - so only on a few days should active heating have been needed at all. OK you may be growing Madagascan wotsits at 20C min temp but then you should have your greenhouse designed to much higher insulation standards. Regards, Martin Brown |
#5
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keith ;-) wrote:
Hi Martin,You presume right! I am keeping my 10 x 8 greenhouse to around 15c 24/7 for growing orchids.The greenhouse is green aluminium ,I have put 4 ft close board fence panals around the out side so the bottom half is clad & inside has bubble wrap ,apart from the double door end. OK. That is a mistake you need to insulate the double door as well. Hanging a curtain of bubble wrap on the inside to stop drafts and so that you don't let too much hot air out when you open the doors will help. I had an internal door in mine with the hot end half heated. You roughly double the heating bill for every 5C above ambient. I will have to insulate between the cladding & glass.And think of a way of insulating the double door end(two 2 ft wide sliding doors)with 2ft glass panes either side. For the outside if you can stand it being opaque and not especially pretty B&Q do cheap 2" & 4" polystyrene slabs that stand up to the weather well and have superb isulation properites. This is my first winter with the greenhouse so its a learning curve! Its an expensive hobby. Orchids certainly are! I grow mainly cacti so I can get away with frost free except for a few of the touchy exotics and they spend winter either in a hot box or indoors. You should be able to get the bill down a bit. Cacti never really liked paraffin heaters the condensation tends to encourage fungi on dormant plants. I guess orchids would love it! Regards, Martin Brown |
#6
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On 7/2/05 21:47, in article , "Martin
Brown" wrote: keith ;-) wrote: Is anyone using a greenhouse heater with gas bottle supplying it,if so how long do the bottles last?I am thinking of buying a 4.2 kw greenhouse gas heater with hose & regulator instead of 2kw electric heater which I have just received electric bill for 120 quid for two month ouch! How hot are you keeping the greenhouse? My annual bill for greenhouse heating was never more than £200 annually for a 20x10'. More than paraffin but without all the ventilation, refueling and condensation problems. Use bubblewrap over all the interior glass, create a curtain inside the door so that only the blind end of the greenhouse is heated. Then set the thermostat to keep a temperature of 5C and have a hot box for anything that is really touchy or just take it indoors. I presume you are heating your greenhouse almost continuously with 2kW to get that sort of immense bill. Most days it has actually been above 5C this winter - so only on a few days should active heating have been needed at all. OK you may be growing Madagascan wotsits at 20C min temp but then you should have your greenhouse designed to much higher insulation standards. Regards, Martin Brown |
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