Ertai2
You're camping and it gets chilly. Whats the best way to heat your tent? Could you build a fire outside of the doorway and place a fan in between to have it blow the warm air inside? Will the tent have enough insulation? Or will the heated air dissipate by the time it even reaches your face? What are some good ways to heat a tent WITHOUT using a portable heater that uses 1000 watts of electricity, or gas / oil?
Answer 1 ... cool answer, I never thought of that and it was the only reasonable answer I had at the time. Will be considered. Possibly using those Nu-Wick candles.
Answer 2 ... very intuitive, never thought of that. Wouldnt use that method though but nice alternative.
Answer 3 ... Im familiar with survival techniques as well and this is what I would do if I built a primitive shelter like a lean-to or a trench. But a tent would be more permanent over that spot and in the winter it might not be as comfortable.
The answer I was actually looking for I eventually found is a wood stove placed in your tent believe it or not. I dont exactly know how the pipe will exit the tent but that is something Im going to research right now ... You can also buy a small propane powered stove that has flexible pipes leading out the doorway. In case anybody out there is reasearching this answer for answers of their own. My choice is a lightweight wood stove with oven and shelf accessory.
Answer
Just an idea taken from survival techniques.
Before you put up your tent, dig a good sized hole at least 12" deep and about as long and wide as your body when laying down.
Build a fire in the hole you have dug and feed it enough wood to get a large bed of coals all along the bottom of the hole about 3 inches thick but no more than 5 inches thick.
Cover the hole with at least 6" of the dirt that came out of the hole. You can also put a layer of stones directly over the coals first then cover that with the dirt.
That area will stay very warm for hours. Place your tent over that spot.
It is very very important that you cover the coals with no less than 6" of dirt to prevent burning the bottom of the tent or causing a fire.
I have used this method to keep myself warm when spending many hours in a blind while trying to photograph wildlife. I haven't placed a tent with a plastic floor over the hot spot though.
Just an idea taken from survival techniques.
Before you put up your tent, dig a good sized hole at least 12" deep and about as long and wide as your body when laying down.
Build a fire in the hole you have dug and feed it enough wood to get a large bed of coals all along the bottom of the hole about 3 inches thick but no more than 5 inches thick.
Cover the hole with at least 6" of the dirt that came out of the hole. You can also put a layer of stones directly over the coals first then cover that with the dirt.
That area will stay very warm for hours. Place your tent over that spot.
It is very very important that you cover the coals with no less than 6" of dirt to prevent burning the bottom of the tent or causing a fire.
I have used this method to keep myself warm when spending many hours in a blind while trying to photograph wildlife. I haven't placed a tent with a plastic floor over the hot spot though.
can I heat my camping tent with my 170,000 btu propane forced air heater?
Jim
The tent is really sturdy.
Answer
I assume we are talking about a construction heater...There are not too many heaters of 170k BTU that are portable other than construction heaters.
There are two possible types of construction heaters.
One is direct fired, where the fuel/air mixture is burned and the products of combustion flow out of the end of the heater along with the heated air. Pipe this into a tent and two things will happen. It will be on fire in pretty short order because this is putting out the heat of 2 furnaces designed to heat a 3000 ft² house! and you will not be able to survive in there with that heat and carbon dioxide level ( lack of oxygen ). Carbon monoxide wont have time to kill you because you will have already suffocated!
The other is an indirect fired unit. It has a heat exchanger with a fan blowing clean air across it which you can then duct into a building. But again, the heat output would drive you out of the tent, 170,000 btu is just waaay too much for what you are talking about. Also they require electricity to operate.
Unless we are talking about a 2000 ft² event tent or something...My answer is definitely NO! Don't do it!
If you could elaborate on the type of heater and tent you are talking about, maybe I could offer some suggestions...Is that a typo perhaps and we are talking about a little 17,000btu heater?
I assume we are talking about a construction heater...There are not too many heaters of 170k BTU that are portable other than construction heaters.
There are two possible types of construction heaters.
One is direct fired, where the fuel/air mixture is burned and the products of combustion flow out of the end of the heater along with the heated air. Pipe this into a tent and two things will happen. It will be on fire in pretty short order because this is putting out the heat of 2 furnaces designed to heat a 3000 ft² house! and you will not be able to survive in there with that heat and carbon dioxide level ( lack of oxygen ). Carbon monoxide wont have time to kill you because you will have already suffocated!
The other is an indirect fired unit. It has a heat exchanger with a fan blowing clean air across it which you can then duct into a building. But again, the heat output would drive you out of the tent, 170,000 btu is just waaay too much for what you are talking about. Also they require electricity to operate.
Unless we are talking about a 2000 ft² event tent or something...My answer is definitely NO! Don't do it!
If you could elaborate on the type of heater and tent you are talking about, maybe I could offer some suggestions...Is that a typo perhaps and we are talking about a little 17,000btu heater?
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