I've got to say, the prospect of being able to warm my feet to a high temperature in a freezing cold garden shed, has got me very excited - my feet get mad cold on longer winter bike rides no matter what I do, start cramping, as do my calf muscles. Sometimes it's so bad I have to get off and walk for a bit.
This way, I'll be ableto give my legs a good roasting!
I don't think the 12v blankets are up to much; there are plenty of reviews of all types on YT, many from Van Lifers (those living permanently in vans). My take is that 50w isn't much by way of heat output at all, and hardly any 12v ones have any option to adjust heat (at best it might be high/low/off).
I recently bought a 150w mains powered blanket/throw (£50 off amazon, but prices have increased dramatically with the onset of cold weather - it's now £70). Even then, a minority complain of it not being very "hot", although I find it toasty enough.
I'm running a 120w buck converter off my e-bike batteries. That's a 10A draw which is okay for my not exceptional e-bike cells. That provides 120w at 12v, and then I can optionally feed USB and/or a 240v inverter: That's fine for powering my laptop or charging my phone, but this lower powered 10A buck won't power my 150w blanket:
That's because this 150w blanket has 10 heat settings: On full heat, it's drawing 150w as you'd expect (too much for the buck), but at lower settings it pulses at 150w, the lower the heat setting the less frequent the pulse. But in all cases, it's still a 150w draw - too much for my 10A buck (and battery cells).
The 25A buck Nealh lists seems a good higher powered option so should work with a decently heated mains blanket/throw (or heat pad if it's just your feet that need warming), but can your battery cells cope?