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how to heat a small iba??

jack954

Active member
i have a small iba with a new ww razor with airlift doors. there is not enough room on ceiling or walls above rails for a tube heater. it is an end bay though with block walls, and my thought is to attach some type of heater to the outside wall and knock out a couple of blocks to force heat through.
has anyone been in this situation and has come up with a solution? any suggestions or recommendations would be appreciated
 
i have a small iba with a new ww razor with airlift doors. there is not enough room on ceiling or walls above rails for a tube heater. it is an end bay though with block walls, and my thought is to attach some type of heater to the outside wall and knock out a couple of blocks to force heat through.
has anyone been in this situation and has come up with a solution? any suggestions or recommendations would be appreciated
Regarding a tube heater - it does not need to be above the rails or bridge. You can install it right on your side walls at just about any level. I have seen this many times in small, narrow bays.

And if you do decide to attach some type of forced air heater instead, what is on the other side of the bay - is it an equipment room? It might make more sense to move heat through the other side if you have an equipment room there.
 
thanks for the tube heater info, i feel like anywhere below the rails would be directly hit with the high pressure pass. what’s your thoughts on that? unfortunately i am 3 bays away from the equipment room., i have a self serve bay on one side and nothing on the other as the automatic bay sits at the end of 6
 
thanks, but i have a flat concrete roof and did that at another location about 20 years ago and hoping not to have to go that route again
 
28’ length
15’ width
10’ height
 

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thanks, but i have a flat concrete roof and did that at another location about 20 years ago and hoping not to have to go that route again
You can mount a unit on the roof and duct it down the wall and into the bay, if you're worried about the roof penetration. Or, build some wall brackets and hang the whole thing on the wall.
 
Saw your post on Facebook as well....thought this would be a better place to reply. Do you have floor heat in the bays, or is a tube heater the only option? I have floor heat with an attic. I insulate the hell out of the attic and with the floor heat running, the Razors never even weep. I know you have a flat roof, but if you have floor heat in that bay, you might be OK without any other heat source.

Thanks,
Lighthouse
 
Wow thats a tight fit. If I were you I would forget about heating the bay. You don't need to. You need to heat the machine. Get a 40-50 gallon hot water tank, 5 gallon reservoir, circulating pump, and some 1/2" hose. Fill the hot water tank with antifreeze and water 50/50. Run the hose through your igus and zip tie to any hose in the bridge on your machine that carries water/chemical then run it back. With that set up you can run without doors up to -20. If someone hits your door then your still in business. No forced air heat can compete with that.
 
Wow thats a tight fit. If I were you I would forget about heating the bay. You don't need to. You need to heat the machine. Get a 40-50 gallon hot water tank, 5 gallon reservoir, circulating pump, and some 1/2" hose. Fill the hot water tank with antifreeze and water 50/50. Run the hose through your igus and zip tie to any hose in the bridge on your machine that carries water/chemical then run it back. With that set up you can run without doors up to -20. If someone hits your door then your still in business. No forced air heat can compete with that.
Really like this idea, we don't get enough cold days to justify a system like this in GA, but this would be a good choice if we were somewhere colder. This would probably be a very energy efficient method for freeze protection.
 
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