Hello,
Just built an 8x10 ice shack to do some winter work in the Bering Sea off the coast of Nome, AK. The Shack is well insulated with r19 walls and r30 ceiling and floor. 6mil plastic on the inside and Tyvek on the outside. One weatherproof door and one double pane window. Purchased one of the last M2200's up here. Planning on running it on low 24/7 to keep the shack and the components inside from freezing. Figure I'll put a resistor in place of the thermostat to trick the heater to think it's 72 degrees +/-. I will set it 2 degrees higher so the heater never cycles and always runs on low 24/7.
My question is this... Without further testing (which I do plan on doing) what do you think would take less electricity, running the heater on low like described above, or letting it cycle using more energy to start the burn with the igniter. For the cycle option lets just say I have the heater set @55 degrees. The heater turns on and takes 10 min to get up to 59 degrees before shutting down again to repeat the cycle in another 10 minutes. So in 24hours the heater cycles 72 times. How much juice does it use in 24 hours compared to the heater just being left on low 24 hours in low with just the fan running?
The reason I ask is because I want to figure out how many deep cell batteries I will need to hook up in parallel to provide enough power to run the heater for 24 hours. I will be visiting the shack daily to do work, and while I work over a period of 3-4 hours I will recharge the battery bank with an alternator. The fuel usage is not important. To me the less power used the better. I will be using a 1000watt pure sine wave inverter.
-Kevin
PS: Where do I find the 2pin tactile switches monitor uses under the buttons?
Just built an 8x10 ice shack to do some winter work in the Bering Sea off the coast of Nome, AK. The Shack is well insulated with r19 walls and r30 ceiling and floor. 6mil plastic on the inside and Tyvek on the outside. One weatherproof door and one double pane window. Purchased one of the last M2200's up here. Planning on running it on low 24/7 to keep the shack and the components inside from freezing. Figure I'll put a resistor in place of the thermostat to trick the heater to think it's 72 degrees +/-. I will set it 2 degrees higher so the heater never cycles and always runs on low 24/7.
My question is this... Without further testing (which I do plan on doing) what do you think would take less electricity, running the heater on low like described above, or letting it cycle using more energy to start the burn with the igniter. For the cycle option lets just say I have the heater set @55 degrees. The heater turns on and takes 10 min to get up to 59 degrees before shutting down again to repeat the cycle in another 10 minutes. So in 24hours the heater cycles 72 times. How much juice does it use in 24 hours compared to the heater just being left on low 24 hours in low with just the fan running?
The reason I ask is because I want to figure out how many deep cell batteries I will need to hook up in parallel to provide enough power to run the heater for 24 hours. I will be visiting the shack daily to do work, and while I work over a period of 3-4 hours I will recharge the battery bank with an alternator. The fuel usage is not important. To me the less power used the better. I will be using a 1000watt pure sine wave inverter.
-Kevin
PS: Where do I find the 2pin tactile switches monitor uses under the buttons?
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