can anyone recommend a good electric space heater...one that actually heats a room. i know some are pieces of crap that blow moderately warm air you can only feel if your next to it. Im looking for one that fills a room so i can lower the ole thermostat.
1/25/2009 4:34:32 PM
lowes/home depot has some decent ones.but honestly it's not gonna lower your bill much. Those things are fucking energy hogs to begin with. 1500W space heaters? that's like keeping your toaster on 24/7.if you have a big house and you only use one room, it might help jsut to keep that room warm though, idk
1/25/2009 4:36:37 PM
space heaters give me headaches for some reason
1/25/2009 4:36:47 PM
my parents use one similiar to this and it seems to work pretty well:http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product.do?product_id=5142284They heat the house with a fireplace insert but use the space heater for added heat in the living room or the bedroom as needed.[Edited on January 25, 2009 at 4:40 PM. Reason : ]
1/25/2009 4:37:09 PM
^we have those
1/25/2009 4:39:47 PM
I use my PS3. Just run the folding at home client, set the timer, and my room stays a good 5 degrees warmer than the rest of the house.
1/25/2009 4:40:39 PM
i have a small place, 900 sg ft. I have a tower one, not a radiator one, and it sucks. you can only feel it if its next to you
1/25/2009 4:44:56 PM
I have one similar to the one posted above. It works fairly well.As dharney pointed out, watch the costs. A 1500W heater can cost you close to $100/mo if you leave it on all the time. If you own your place and plan to be there awhile, it may be more cost efficient to pay someone to look at upgrading/repairing your heat pump and ventilation.
1/25/2009 4:55:13 PM
It helps if it has a built in fan.
1/25/2009 7:04:03 PM
1/25/2009 7:12:39 PM
ah yes, the internet arguer. Hello
1/25/2009 9:20:51 PM
^^a heat pump that consumes 1500 W of energy places more than 1500 W of energy into the house because it extracts energy from the cold air outside. a 1500 W resistance heater only places 1500 W of energy (actually a little less) into the house.learn about coefficient of performance and get back to us
1/25/2009 9:29:29 PM
whats the difference between a ceramic one and a heat fan one? im not a physicist, so dumb it down for me
1/25/2009 9:45:29 PM
forced convection vs. natural convectionthe fan just moves the air across the hot surface and then out into the room. if it blows too hard though, the air will move too fast and won't warm up before it moves out into the room.ones w/o a fan use natural convection (air in contact warms up and rises)
1/25/2009 10:04:27 PM
basically, all things being equal, the fan forced model will use more power and heat up your room faster.[Edited on January 25, 2009 at 10:13 PM. Reason : i'd get the oil filled radiator. slow heat, but not bad at all.]
1/25/2009 10:13:25 PM
1/26/2009 12:49:59 PM
1/26/2009 12:53:09 PM
Of course you don't. You just want to copy Wikipedia quotes. Which i actually find quite amusing because on the same link is stated :
1/26/2009 12:55:19 PM
The Amish have this thread on lock.For real though, I have one of the oil filled ones like hondaguy posted. It works well and doesn't have to run all the time. Once it gets the oil heated it radiates heat for a long time after it is shut off. It heats my bedroom very quickly and then I can turn it to the lowest heat setting to maintain the temp.I'd suggest getting one with a fan built in. I do regret not getting that. I have a ceiling fan, so I just turn the ceiling fan on reverse and it distributes the air fairly well throughout the room. It'll still warm the whole room without a fan, but the fan definitely helps distribute the air all around.[Edited on January 26, 2009 at 12:59 PM. Reason : l]
1/26/2009 12:57:22 PM
i have no idea what you're arguingare you saying that a 1500 W resistance heater results in the same temperature change in my house as a 1500 W heat pump? [Edited on January 26, 2009 at 12:58 PM. Reason : i haven't used the terms efficiency anywhere. i did use COP though.]
1/26/2009 12:57:36 PM
Temperature change in your house based on your power bill does not mean a system is more efficient. You think its more efficient because you dont pay for it. Then you tell me to go to a thermo class. Do you think a thermodynamics class cares about how much you pay for power? Efficiency is based on a total system. You're taking advantage of the cold air outside your home which obviously a resistor will not. You CAN NOT come up with a more efficient way to use an input power to create heat then a resistor. PIN = POUT. Can you come up with a cheaper way to do it (you've answered this yourself three times now) YES. The cold air IS INPUT POWER.I'm telling you. I'm saying X. You're saying Y. Truce baby!
1/26/2009 1:01:42 PM
there is a cheaper way to warm a house than filling it with space heaterswhy does everyone take it personal when you try to explain their misconceptions to them?i should argue that this man doesn't give a fuck about efficiency and only cares about cost, so why did you come in here touting efficiency bullshit?[Edited on January 26, 2009 at 1:05 PM. Reason : adsfjl;k]
1/26/2009 1:04:48 PM
Yes but that doesn't mean a space heater is inefficient. It isn't.A heatpump isnt either. You just pay for less because one of your forms of input power is free.Maybe we do need to go to class. I was an EE so I never got to take thermodynamics. Perhaps the mentality is "dont pay for it, thats a dont care" oh look a heat pump is 600% efficient!!!
1/26/2009 1:07:07 PM
mother nature wants her energy backoh wait, she gets it right back through the walls
1/26/2009 1:08:36 PM
yeah i think she gets a little TOO much back from me
1/26/2009 1:09:47 PM
If you have poorly insulated ducting, a space heater is the way to go, just heat the room you are in the most. The place my parents are in has gas heat and no duct insulation. They set the heat low and use the oil filled electric heaters in whatever room they are in. Also good if the central heat doesn't distribute the heat evenly. I had one apartment that dumped all the central heat and AC into my bedroom, had to get one of the oil filled heaters so the roomie wasn't freezing while I was sweating.
1/26/2009 1:24:56 PM
900 sq ft is pretty big for a 1500w space heater. don't they say to use them in rooms like 150-200 sq ft?
1/26/2009 1:35:57 PM
1/26/2009 1:52:32 PM
the heater that is always in a different place in costco always amazes me...
1/26/2009 3:39:44 PM
the radiant one?
1/26/2009 3:43:07 PM
Sweatshirts and coats work great.
1/26/2009 3:45:04 PM
i like bulky blankets
1/26/2009 4:17:16 PM
1/26/2009 5:15:30 PM
well obviously, but i was just pointing out a situation where a spaceheater is not the way to go
1/26/2009 7:28:06 PM