T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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954.1 | Go for 2 | TOOK::SCHLENER | | Wed May 24 1989 16:42 | 14 |
| I agree with being afraid of the pilot for the water heater. What about
electronic ignition? Are there any gas water heaters with that type of
system. I have the electronic ignitions on my furnace, dryer and stove.
I am concerned about propane in the house, however. With doing work on
my kitchen, we seem to have caused a slight leak somewhere in my gas
dryer. (It always seems to smell slightly of propane.)
For the amount of work, I would vote on #2. The previous stable I was
in, had an electric hot water heater. We didn't have any problems
with it in the winter. I feel it's alot safer than option # 3.
Propane can be much more dangerous to work with especially in a barn.
Cindy
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954.2 | Some more questions/thoughts | TOOK::SCHLENER | | Wed May 24 1989 16:46 | 10 |
| re .-1, By the way, option 2 was stated as being more expensive to run
since it would be on all the time. I imagine with the right amount of
insulation, option 2 would still be the safer method.
re .0, Can you find out from the electric company, the opproximate cost
of running a water heater with x amount of insulation in a 40 degree
room (Or however cold it may be).
Cindy
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954.3 | | CSC32::K_WORKMAN | Wide Body Patrol | Thu May 25 1989 09:29 | 21 |
| Hi Cindy,
Thanks for the reply. Gas and barns in my mind just dont mix. Propane
is a heavy gas and can settle like underneath the tack room floor. We
are purchasing the completely enclosed light fixtures to prevent
sparking and aren't going to be storing hay in the barn, we will have
an out building for that but still.... It's looking more and more like
it will be around a 40 gallon water heater and we will insulate it
pretty heavily as well as all the associated piping. It's just such a
big object that it is going to take up room either in the wash area or
where ever we decide to put it. The other thing is with either
electric option, we will probably have to run 220 into to the barn.
I have seen at shows some portable machines that use gas that you
attach a hose to and get unlimited hot water. I don't know what this
is called, but maybe this is an option also.
Maybe someone has some other options or ideas we haven't addressed yet.
Thanks again...
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954.4 | Timer to save electricity | DECWET::DADDAMIO | | Thu May 25 1989 15:45 | 11 |
| If you're concerned about the electric hot water heater being on all
the time and wasting money, you can get a timer to control it. We
had one at our previous house. You can set it up so the hot water
heater only runs when you need hot water. We used to set it to go
on about 1/2 hour before we needed the water, plus the times we set
were the times when we were home. Our water heater ended up running
about 3-4 hours a day. There is also a manual switch to turn it on
and override the timers. We'd use this on weekends when we'd want
to do wash during the day.
Jan
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954.5 | Smoke detectors... | CSC32::K_WORKMAN | HSC/SHADOW Tech Leader 522-4990 | Tue May 30 1989 09:40 | 10 |
| Thanks for the replies and mail. It looks like we will go with the 40
- 50 gallon hot water heater (all electric). We are going to build a
small room adjacent to the wash stall to house it in and insulate it
like crazy. The timer is a great idea!
One more question? Does any body have a smoke detector(s) in their barn?
I was wondering if it isn't too dusty in a barn for one of these.
Would it cause it to go off needlessly or not go off correctly?
Thanks again...
|
954.6 | ex | WEDOIT::NANCY | | Mon Jun 05 1989 12:44 | 54 |
| I have a couple of additional ideas:
We ran our hot and cold water from the house to our barn. Had a
ditch dug by a landscaping guy with a John deer tractor one week
and he came back another week after the water lines were run to
fill it in. Inside the barn the water line comes up facing the aisle
surrounded by a 4 foot deep by less than 2 foot wide square of
concrete which insulates the piping. We built a closet with a
door on it above this. As an added measure we put heat tape around
the copper pipes from the faucets emerging out of the closet and
down into the concrete footing for about a foot. Inside the closet
behind the faucets are turnoff valves because we ran additional
copper piping up to the ceiling and clear across the other side
of the barn and down to the back wall of a corner stall (prior to
lining the stall with 2 inch thick lumber) for an additional outside
water spicket to be used for watering, washing , or whatever...from
spring-fall, the shutoff valves are used to turn this supply off for
the winter (This turned out to be an excellent idea...we are expanding
our barn on the end where this faucet is and the water supply will
come in extremely handy!) We just went through a winter with subzero
temperatures and have had absolutely no problems. We just dug another
ditch from the house and ran it approx. 200 feet to the cattle shed.
This one was about 3 feet deep and the guys spread hay on the bottom
of the hole and laid 1/2 inch flexible PVC pipe down with additional
hay on top...and with copper piping attached to the end...ran it
up through the bottom of an old concrete watering trough. They also
ran underground electrical wire down at the same time. We put a
heater in the trough during the winter to keep the water unfrozen
and they rigged up some kind of simple float device like a toilet
has to turn on the water when automatically to keep the trough filled.
No more carrying pails of water to the beasts! With the electric..no
more darkness either!(The calves can see!) We also ran a phone line
into our barn about a foot beneath the ground above the water lines.
We can raise and lower our water temperature from the cellar of
our house. I keep in on the lowest setting for washing horses.
I saw a device advertised that can go under your sink and raise
the temperature of your faucet water. I'm thinking about putting
this device in the barn so I can temporarily raise my water temperature
really high for bran mashes. . .Maybe you've seen something like
it?
Don't forget to put extra water outlets and electrical outlets in
your barn...and outside of your barn for things like spotlights
or water to attach a hose to for your future convienance. Also put
half of your electric on one line with a circuit breaker and the other
half on a seperate line (2 electrical lines for the barn) if one set of
lights trips a breaker...the other will remain on....safety precaution!!!!
If you want more ideas or details...let me know,
Nancy
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954.7 | Vacuum the fire alarm free of dust.. | WEDOIT::NANCY | | Mon Jun 12 1989 15:03 | 6 |
|
I believe barns that have fire alarms vacuum them a couple of times
a year to prevent dust build up.
Nancy
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954.8 | | DYO780::AXTELL | Dragon Lady | Mon Jun 12 1989 15:15 | 14 |
| One of my boarders does fire alarms fo a living and he says
that dust is indeed a major problem. Vacuuming wll help, but
it will have to be more often than a couple time per year. You
also need to watch where you put them. You can also get heat
sensors, but barn temperatures are hard to control.
The good news is that with these alarms, the worst that will
happen is that they will set themselves off falsly. It's irritating,
but better than having them not go off when they should.
-maureen
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954.9 | Pros and cons: Hot water/heated tack room | FRAGLE::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Mon Sep 09 1991 14:30 | 18 |
| I started to put this under the Ideal barn string (1486), but I think
I'd like to start a discussion, than to continue the wish list.....mods
feel free if you'd like to move this note......
Plans are in the preliminary stage for my barn.....Yeah! And after
reading the string discussing blankets and lugging hot water to the
barn......I was wondering if I should re-consider hot water in the barn.
Well, I had already thought about it for a wash stall......but you got
those wheels-a-turnin'.....and now I'd like to consider it more.
So, I'd like to hear from anyone who has hot water in the barn, any pro's
or con's. Costs for keeping a room heated.....general experiences......
Anything....I have 6 months minimum to get the list completed, and I want
to make sure I have all the basis covered. And I couldn't ask for a
better method than to use this file pick other folks minds. :^)
Thanks...Michele
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954.10 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Mon Sep 09 1991 14:48 | 9 |
| Hi Michelle,
Where I keep my horse, we have both hot and cold water, which isn't in
a heated room. There is a hot water heater attached, and the pump is
kept covered in the winter with no freezing problem. The barn we are
currently designing will have a heated room, hot and cold water, a wash
stall and hopefully a bathroom. Those are the plans anyways.
Linda
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954.11 | We plan on both heat and hot water | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | | Mon Sep 09 1991 16:39 | 34 |
| We too are in the process of dreaming for a new barn.
Our neighbors when we lived in NH had a hot water heater in their barn
aisle without it being in a heated room. Probably very inefficient in
terms of energy but it worked. They also had a tack room which was
bascially unheated but they would use those oil filled heaters that
look like old fashioned radiators to take the chill off.
When we moved to Seattle 3 years ago, I was shocked that just about
*EVERYBODY* here has a heated tack room! Two reasons: 1) electricity is
cheaper and the weather is milder so the cost to heat is lower and 2)
In this climate, leather molds very quickly if it's left in an unheated
space.
So, our plan is to have a heated tackroom with a hot water heater in
it. That way we don't have to schlep the saddles etc to the house to
clean them in comfort; they won't mold in the winter; and we can have a
wash stall.
It's royal pain to have to carry hot water out to give a
horse a bath and it takes too bloody long to heat it with those
immersion heaters. One idea that we have used to get around these
difficulties until we build our "dream-barn" comes from the hardware
store. They sell this things that attach a portable dishwasher to a
kitchen sinkfaucet. Usually, the dishwasher hose is connected to that
thing and you run the dishwasher. Well, you just connect a garden hose
to it; run the hose outside and give the horse a bath in the yard.
Of course, if you have a utility sink in your house, its faucet may
be able to accept a hose directly and you could skip the trip to the
hardware store
But I digress...sorry about that
A
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954.12 | | FRAGLE::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Mon Sep 09 1991 17:04 | 15 |
| wow.....a bathroom......what a luxury! I'm having a hard enough
time trying to get hot water......I don't think I'll try for that
(although, the dream house should have a stratigically placed
mud/wash/bath/winter_horse_stuff room....so the mud could be kept
to one area).
I suprised that both of you mentioned not having the plumbing in the
heated room....I guess our experiences have not been so positive. The
place we started boarding at had a heated room and of course hot water
but the pipes kept freezing anyway....it seemed like a lot of work. My
girlfriend works for a woman who has warmbloods, and she has a nice
heated tack room and water heater.....I just havent had the chance to
meet her.
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954.13 | Heated tack room and hot water are wonderful! | ASD::MCCROSSAN | | Tue Sep 10 1991 10:19 | 12 |
|
The barn where I used to keep my horse has a heated tack room and
also hot water. I don't remember what kind of heat she had, but it
was wonderful to put a warm bit in their mouth in the winter! ;^) She
also had a washer in the tack room...
Anyway, the water pipes and the heater were connected in the tack room
with the water spigot coming out into the aisle. All we had to do was
run a hose off of it... It was great to be able to top off buckets
with warm water and to keep the toes and fingers warm after riding...
Good luck with your barn!
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