What You'll Need

I needed a solid heat source for my workspace, and after testing a few options, I landed on this build. It's straightforward, uses basic materials, and actually works.

  • Heat source element (ceramic heater or heat gun)
  • Metal enclosure or housing
  • Temperature controller
  • Power supply
  • Wiring and connectors
  • Safety switch
  • Fireproof mounting surface

Step-by-Step

1. Pick your heat element

I used a 1500W ceramic heater core. You can pull one from an old space heater or buy a new one. Heat guns work too, but they're louder and less efficient for steady heat.

2. Build the housing

Grab a metal box — steel or aluminum. Cut openings for airflow: intake on the bottom, exhaust on top. Drill holes for wiring and mounting screws. Make sure everything is grounded. No plastic here — it'll melt.

3. Wire the temperature controller

Connect the controller to your power supply and heat element. Most controllers have a thermocouple input — mount that sensor near the exhaust so it reads the actual output temp. Set your target temp on the controller.

4. Add the safety switch

Wire a thermal cutoff switch inline with the power. If things get too hot, it kills the power. This is not optional. I mounted mine on the enclosure wall.

5. Test it

Plug it in, set the controller to 100°F, and let it run. Check the temp with a separate thermometer. Adjust the controller settings if needed. Watch for any hot spots on the housing.

6. Mount it

Bolt the enclosure to a fireproof surface — concrete floor, metal bench, brick wall. Keep it away from flammable stuff. I use mine under my workbench.

What to Watch Out For

  • Don't run it unattended for hours. Even with safeties, stuff happens.
  • Check the wiring monthly. Loose connections cause fires.
  • If the thermal cutoff trips, figure out why before resetting.

This thing pumps out steady heat for under $50 in parts. Took me about two hours to build.

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