How to Make Your Own Solar Powered Winter Garage Heater

Sunday, January 3rd, 2010

Whilst a lot of people do have electricity in their own garages and sheds, heat can be an issue throughout winter.
However you can take advantage of the sunny days of winter and use solar power from the sun to produce heat in your garage. Particularly if you live in hilly or mountainous areas, where the sun can reflect the suns rays as you could build a solar furnace to collect some of that sunshine that bounces off the snow or that just beams down. Solar powered furnaces have in the past recorded to reach temperatures of up to 110 degrees. So if you have a lot of scrap laying around in your basement, then put it to good use.
You can start with some 2×4’s and plywood to make a simple box. It helps if you build your box to the dimensions of the material that you are going to be fitting in there, in this case you should use aluminum cans because they’re easy to get hold of and to fit into your home made box. 50 cans in 5 columns of 10 will funnel air upwards.
Before putting your cans in the box, be sure to seal the edges with wood glue to ensure that any of the heat that the box produces does not escape.
So you may have already thought, “How can air climb the columns of cans when there’s no hole at the bottom of the can?” Answer: drill press and 3/4-inch bit. Times 45.
The last five cans, the bases of each column, will sit on the bottom of the box and thus will be unable to draw air from underneath, so I poked holes in the sides of each of the five. Stack the cans with liberal doses of adhesive caulk. Give them enough time to dry. Once they have dried paint each column with black BBQ paint to absorb the suns heat, make sure that the paint is matt, as it absorbs more heat like this, BBQ paint is also very good because it keeps from flaking off the cans.
At the top, you can then drill an outlet hole. Leave an inch or two of space between the tops of the columns and the top of the box to permit air to flow out of the columns. Drill out the outlet hole based on the diameter of a wet-dry vacuum hose that you could find laying in your basement, about 1-1/2 inches in diameter.
At the bottom you can use another wet-dry vacuum attachment; the rectangle shaped end that you use on the carpet, this will disperse the incoming air more evenly. Screw it in at each ends, then glue the seal. Then you can start to glue the columns in place. Remember to have drilled your inlet hole in the bottom. You can drill an inlet hole at the base for each column if you have time, this way the air can simply pass over the cans (there’s about 1/2 to 3/4 of an inch between the cans and the upper edge of the 2×4 frame) and all the air would be forced to pass though them picking up all of the absorbed heat.
You can then make a frame for your solar powered furnace using anything strong enough to hold it up towards the sun, you may wish to attach a thermometer to it to see how quickly it heats up and to what temperatures it can reach. Once it has been out side all day you can then bring it inside your garage and the heat that has been preserved by the solar heater shall radiate through your chosen space to heat up.

Be Ready: Uses for an Electric Home Power Generator

Saturday, October 24th, 2009

Knowing is half the battle, in most if not all walks of life. Remembering what had been needed or sorely missed in the past when surviving an emergency or complex situation, as well as foreseeing what could be needed in the future, will help make you prepared and sufficiently autonomous when the real test comes along.

Considering and listing what uses you might have for an Electric Home Power Generator is the very first step before purchasing, planning, installing and actually using one of these emergency energy providers. The size, type of engine, level of output and even physical location will be determined by what we will need to ask of it, in complete safety and peace of mind. Do you entirely know what yours will be required to do for you?

Short-term Uses

Home owners faced with a particularly large and diverse land, or simply quite adamant in doing every home-related work independently, will need a wide range of powerful equipment to be used on the spot for a short period of time. Added to the eventual power-failures and other emergencies, a portable model of generator, to be moved and called upon at a moment’s notice, might be the way to go to undertake the following uses: