NIW that would be great! I have been trying to gather information to see if I could do this myself. I was out in that barn doing chores earlier tonight and thought I should take a picture, but my phone was in my back jeans pocket, under my quilted coveralls, under my down coat, (and we are having the traditional January thaw.) Tomorrow.
I did look closely at the receptacle, and it says NEMA 6-50, and on top the electrician wrote welding circuit, 50 amps 240 V. The top center hole looks like a ground, and the two bottom slots for the blades are vertical. I *think* the right hand one was the longest.
I am not certain that the heater I am looking at fits those parameters since I don't totally follow the jargon, but seemed possible: dxh 1000ts
http://www.dewalt.com/en-us/product...ed-air-electric-construction-heater/dxh1000ts
It requires a power source of 240Vac/42 amps on a 50 amp 2 pole circuit breaker on highest setting. I am not sure if that is what is in that panel?
I downloaded the instruction manual hoping for more clues, and it does not come with a power cord, but mentions for less than 10 ft, use 14/3 awg wire. I was thinking of more like 50 ft, so started looking at 8/3 welding cords. Seems like I could get a 50 ft welding cord and cut the female plug off, strip the wires and attach to heater. BUT the manual gives no clues about making the connection, and only says must be installed by certified electrician. So must be obvious to them but not to me. Seems like it should be simple, but making a nice secure connection might have some tricks to it. My soldering etc was limited to circuits carrying mV, microamps, so no experience with either ac or big voltages.
I haven't ordered this heater yet....but claims to be safe for unattended operation.
Any further thoughts are appreciated, especially if I don't have something quite straight.