Lee,

The heater I purchased was a Mr. Heater 20,000 BTU wall mount or floor mount. I 
mounted mine on the wall about 6 inches above the floor. If the heater is to be 
used in a garage, they recommend the heater be place no lower than 18 inches. 
If the floor feet are placed on the heater, it is about 2 1/2 inches above 
floor level. Where I mounted the heater, my floor is porcelain tile. But it can 
be placed on a wood floor, If the floor has carpet or vinyl, they recommend 
putting down something that is fire resistant.
RJ
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Lee A. Stone 
  To: blindhandyman@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Saturday, October 04, 2008 6:13 AM
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] Latest project



  R J. a job well done. now do tell, about what is the size of that new 
  heater and does it have wall brackets or does it stand alone? I like 
  that idea of battery start.Lee

  On Fri, Oct 03, 2008 at 09:18:55PM -0400, 
  RJ wrote:
  > The neighbors were having problems with a old ventless heater and I 
  > recommended they throw it out and get a new one. This one they had was 
about 
  > 15 years old. That got me looking for a heater with a good price tag and 
  > around 20,000 B T U. The ones I was looking at around town ranged from $250 
  > to $300 retail with the thermostat control, oxygen sensor, blower and infra 
  > red. I like them better than the blue flame models. I got on Amazon and 
  > found the Mr. Heater brand that list for $329 and would have cost $300 
  > locally for $185. So being the fellow I am, I got two of them, one for the 
  > neighbors and one for me. Tuesday I installed their with their sighted help 
  > in about 1/2 hours, seeing all the connections were right at my finger 
tips, 
  > once I removed the old heater. Yesterday I decided to tackle installing 
  > mine. A course the contractor that built my house five years ago, put in as 
  > little fittings as possible and didn't follow my request. My wife showed me 
  > where she wanted the heater installed. No where near the fitting I had 
  > placed for this purpose. Now out cane the kitchen stove, disconnected the 
  > line back to the main gas line. Placed a tee at that location and re-hooked 
  > up the pipe and stove and started on the line for the heater. This time, 
  > with my wife's insistant, I didn't go to the nation wide home centers to 
get 
  > the material I needed, by went to a locally owned store. I typed out the 
  > material in the way of fittings and pipes I needed. Laid down the list on 
  > his counter, and about a hour later, I was back home installing the gas 
  > lines and fittings. My wife didn't want any pipe or fitting showing and 
only 
  > 5 inches above floor level, seeing the heater either can be use as a wall 
  > mount or floor model. I was lucky, for on the wall the heater was to be 
  > mounted to, there was a closet on the other side of the wall, so I didn't 
  > have to go up through the studs. I ran 7 feet of 1/2 inch pipe from the tee 
  > and 3/8 through the wall and through the floor in the closet, having the 
  > shut off valve in the closet. I than connected the two together with the 
  > corrugated flexible stainless steel gas line for appliances, taking the 
easy 
  > way out, seeing I no longer own a pair of pipe dies. This project only took 
  > my wife and I about 3 1/2 hours to complete. Now went electric goes out, as 
  > long as the natural gas in flowing, we will have heat this winter, for the 
  > only thing that runs on electric is the blower, It is equipped with a aa 
  > battery electric spark starter.
  > RJ
  > 

  -- 
  An idea is not responsible for the people who believe in it.
  Come and chat with me at #quietzone on irc.newnet.net


   

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