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References: [ +subject:/^(?:^\s*(re|sv|fwd|fw)[\[\]\d]*[:>-]+\s*)*\[Shop\-talk\]\s+Comparing\s+kerosene\s+\&\s+electric\s+shop\s+heater\s+costs\s*$/: 10 ]

Total 10 documents matching your query.

1. [Shop-talk] Comparing kerosene & electric shop heater costs (score: 1)
Author: Jim Franklin <jamesf@groupwbench.org>
Date: Wed, 2 Feb 2011 19:07:06 -0500
Since my tools are rusty enough, I'm thinking of using electric heaters in the garage. Can someone confirm my math here? Kerosene is about 135,000 BTU per gallon. Running a 45,000 BTU heater for 3 ho
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00004.html (7,749 bytes)

2. Re: [Shop-talk] Comparing kerosene & electric shop heater costs (score: 1)
Author: "Randall" <TR3driver@ca.rr.com>
Date: Wed, 2 Feb 2011 16:52:59 -0800
Math seems pretty close, although I got $4.75 for electricity; and my marginal electricity rate is a lot higher than $.12/kwh even though the average rate is only a little higher than that. However,
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00005.html (8,262 bytes)

3. Re: [Shop-talk] Comparing kerosene & electric shop heater costs (score: 1)
Author: Brian Kemp <bk13@earthlink.net>
Date: Wed, 02 Feb 2011 18:29:02 -0800
Gotta love that cheap electricity. Out here in the Los Angeles area, So Cal Edison has us on a tiered rate structure and we start at 13 cents/kWh for our "baseline allowance". Apparently the public u
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00006.html (8,630 bytes)

4. Re: [Shop-talk] Comparing kerosene & electric shop heater costs (score: 1)
Author: Jim Franklin <jamesf@groupwbench.org>
Date: Thu, 3 Feb 2011 08:51:20 -0500
Well if I take a jug to the station I can get it for $3.50, but I was being conservative for my precision, which was an order of magnitude :-) Just didn't think a heater that beefy would be so cheap
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00007.html (7,843 bytes)

5. Re: [Shop-talk] Comparing kerosene & electric shop heater costs (score: 1)
Author: Wayne <wmc_st@xxiii.com>
Date: Fri, 04 Feb 2011 23:33:42 -0500
Sounds like you've already got a good handle on it. But you might have a look at this document, starting around page 9: http://geoheat.oit.edu/ghp/survival.pdf It calculates the cost of producing a m
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00011.html (8,780 bytes)

6. [Shop-talk] Comparing kerosene & electric shop heater costs (score: 1)
Author: jamesf at groupwbench.org (Jim Franklin)
Date: Wed, 2 Feb 2011 19:07:06 -0500
Since my tools are rusty enough, I'm thinking of using electric heaters in the garage. Can someone confirm my math here? Kerosene is about 135,000 BTU per gallon. Running a 45,000 BTU heater for 3 ho
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00126.html (8,767 bytes)

7. [Shop-talk] Comparing kerosene & electric shop heater costs (score: 1)
Author: TR3driver at ca.rr.com (Randall)
Date: Wed, 2 Feb 2011 16:52:59 -0800
Math seems pretty close, although I got $4.75 for electricity; and my marginal electricity rate is a lot higher than $.12/kwh even though the average rate is only a little higher than that. However,
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00127.html (9,419 bytes)

8. [Shop-talk] Comparing kerosene & electric shop heater costs (score: 1)
Author: bk13 at earthlink.net (Brian Kemp)
Date: Wed, 02 Feb 2011 18:29:02 -0800
Gotta love that cheap electricity. Out here in the Los Angeles area, So Cal Edison has us on a tiered rate structure and we start at 13 cents/kWh for our "baseline allowance". Apparently the public u
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00128.html (10,395 bytes)

9. [Shop-talk] Comparing kerosene & electric shop heater costs (score: 1)
Author: jamesf at groupwbench.org (Jim Franklin)
Date: Thu, 3 Feb 2011 08:51:20 -0500
Well if I take a jug to the station I can get it for $3.50, but I was being conservative for my precision, which was an order of magnitude :-) Just didn't think a heater that beefy would be so cheap
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00129.html (9,445 bytes)

10. [Shop-talk] Comparing kerosene & electric shop heater costs (score: 1)
Author: wmc_st at xxiii.com (Wayne)
Date: Fri, 04 Feb 2011 23:33:42 -0500
Sounds like you've already got a good handle on it. But you might have a look at this document, starting around page 9: http://geoheat.oit.edu/ghp/survival.pdf It calculates the cost of producing a m
/html/shop-talk/2011-02/msg00133.html (9,703 bytes)


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