Heat Guns?

   / Heat Guns? #1  

Richard

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Apr 6, 2000
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Location
Knoxville, TN
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International 1066 Full sized JCB Loader/Backhoe and a John Deere 430 to mow with
I might have a need for a heat gun. I've never needed one on the past enough to warrant buying one so I don't have one. I've got some Milwaukee batteries so could buy a Milwaukee cordless. If I recall it's roughly $150.

Looked at Harbor Freight (a place I abhor buying tools from in general) and can probably save $100 by buying one of theirs.

Being made in china (my presumption) I'm not going to expect it to last too long however, never say never kind of thing.

Better to buy something (Milwaukee that might also be made in china) where I've already got the batteries, or a plug in version from HF?

I guess I could have asked in the "HF tools that don't suck" thread..... so, anyone know if these suck?
 
   / Heat Guns? #2  
I've had a few, handhelds and bench types, all corded.
How are you going to use yours and for what?
I think it's going to drain a battery pretty quickly...heat guns consume a good amount of amperage.
 
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   / Heat Guns? #3  
I have 2 corded HF heat guns. They are at least 12 years old now and work just fine. I have never seen a battery operated heat gun. I never heard of one till your post. I can't imaging they would last too long as heating elements draw a lot of power.
I use mine on heat shrink tubing, thawing out frozen pipes, heat shrink electrical fittings etc.
 
   / Heat Guns?
  • Thread Starter
#4  
More questions...

Got to thinking how much heat does each one put out.

Milwaukee = 914 BTU
14 amp hercules = 1700 watts

Great, I've got an apples/oranges situation.... look for conversion and it says 1 BTU = .293 watts

So, 914 * .293 = 267 watts?

(this is from an HVAC site)

is that correct math for finding out how they compare?

Milwaukee is battery, Hercules is corded.
 
   / Heat Guns? #5  
Ample heat takes a lot of energy. I’d stick with simple proven AC corded heat guns.
No battery maintenance to worry about. No worries when it’s a longer heating job.
Not everything bought today has to be battery powered.
Power on an AC heat gun will be simple volts, amps, wattage.
No silly battery powered btu’s rating to try to confuse the power rating
 
   / Heat Guns? #6  
My corded guns have a hi/low/off switch. The high is about 1700 don't know what low is but I usually use low for my uses. Before I bought mine I used wife's hair dryer but got yelled at for using it in the garage.
 
   / Heat Guns?
  • Thread Starter
#7  
I'm going to get some Maple wood. Use some Ferric Nitrate on it (some kind of liquid with suspended iron dust as I think I read) and see if I can re-create this. To get the reaction in the wood, I understand it has to be heat treated, hence the gun.

My hope is to make a wooden box out of this. Seems it interacts with the tannens that are in the maple wood. Otherwise, I have no clue. Got the Ferric Nitrate on way, need method to heat to experiment.

I really like that finish.

wood.jpg
 
   / Heat Guns?
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Looking at heat output, I think you're right..... stick with corded.
 
   / Heat Guns? #9  
I've got a benchtop Grizzly. It can be used in hand. Tremendous output, it gets any job done quickly.
 

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