I wasted hours reading/watching videos about heaters when all I needed was to watch this video to get all the information I needed. Great work
@JoeJoeDogFace2 ай бұрын
Thank you, you said it for me.
@nyatella4 жыл бұрын
wow... this man is a gift to humanity, true dedication for the greater good and for KNOWLEDGE.
@GwenMotoGirl3 жыл бұрын
I heat an entire 425 sf home with a Delonghi brand analog mica panel heater. It does a great job for very reasonable cost. I use a small fan-type heater for a few minutes to warm the bathroom before I shower.
@OmmerSyssel3 жыл бұрын
How much mould are you housing with that simple concept?
@jazmo66623 жыл бұрын
I used to have night storage heaters that were really expensive to run and pretty useless as they were cold by the time I got home from work. One of them broke down last year just as winter was starting. I did a bit of my own research and found out about mica heaters. So glad I did, I was so impressed I bought two! I've now got 2 x 2000 kw Laptronix mica panel heaters that heat the whole of my small 2 bed house. Unlike the ones shown in this video mine actually look quite nice and have extra features. They have a digital control panel and remote control (which I don't need to use). I just set the thermostat to the temperature I want the room to be and that's it. They have proven to be so much cheaper to run than the old clunky storage heaters because they are not on all the time. The thermostat is so efficient. It only heats when it senses the room has dropped 2 degrees below the set temperature and then switches off once it's back up again. On days when I go to work in the office, I can set the timer so they only come on when I am home. I have had the big old heaters removed this year, which has given me some wall space back too. Win Win!
@JoeJoeDogFace2 ай бұрын
You are a very intelligent and disciplined test engineer. Please produce more content like this. Thank you!
@southernguy355 жыл бұрын
If you plan on being in the room for a while the oil filled heater is by far the best option for even, constant heat and the safest. If you are say taking a shower, something that heats the room quicker may work best. I think the oil heater is the safest space heater out there. On the thermostat, I've found that the digital ones will burn out due to the circuit board getting too hot while the simple, no frills button style ones will last much longer.
@ammerudgrenda3 жыл бұрын
I totally agree with the oil-filled heater. Another advantage is that they are completely silent.
@reddawgrup17792 жыл бұрын
Two excellent posts!! 👏👍👍
@michael50892 жыл бұрын
@@reddawgrup1779 I keep coming back to oil filled!!
@jeffreybaker17252 жыл бұрын
@@michael5089 that is all I have and I have three of them, only used as needed. Two large ones and one half size
@michael50892 жыл бұрын
@@jeffreybaker1725 Yes. I've currently got a couple of 9 fin ones but think I'll buy a larger 11 fin one. I also have a cheap converter heater and gas central heating but I'm limiting the usage of gas as much as I can 👍
@360DieselDS6 жыл бұрын
It took me 15 minutes to learn months of research. Thank you so much for doing this! I did watch the whole thing by the way... where's my sticker!?
@TutorialGeek6 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your comment. I will work on getting that sticker for you!
@mk-hf2qs5 жыл бұрын
here you go🥳
@kimikogibson98974 жыл бұрын
O
@dtz10004 жыл бұрын
I came here to learn something but I found that it is this youtuber that needs to learn some things from me. He did not mention that the infra red heaters heat up the body rather than the air. This is an advantage because it means you can use them outside. It also means they use less energy as they don't need to heat up the whole room. They only need to heat up the body. They don't dry out the air too much either. All of these things should have been mentioned plus a lot more in the video but they weren't. It's really disappointing.
@robertgwinn84063 жыл бұрын
I wanted a guitar
@rgolianeh5 жыл бұрын
I bought a Mica heater thanks to you. I didn't know such a heater existed.
@classicpontiac372 жыл бұрын
Good video. As a former HVAC service technician with some knowledge of electrical, i will try to explain something to everyone. All electric space heaters are 100% effecient. By this I mean that pretty much 100% of electricity is being converted into heat and sent into the room. If you heat your house with a gas or oil furnace a percentage of the heat is lost up the chimney or out the exhaust. Your average space heater is rated at 1500 watts. The formula is volts x amps=watts. An average US household outlet is rated for 15amps and has 120 volts which is approximately 1800watts. This is why you almost never see a household space heater rated for more than 1500 watts otherwise it would trip the breaker. He is correct in saying that they are all pretty much the same efficiency wise. As far as how they distribute the heat, I guess that's a matter of personal preference. Just don't be fooled by claims of high efficiency electric space heaters. Look at the electrical rating, if it says 1500 watts it's going to use the same amount of electricity as the cheapo space heaters sold at Walmart.
@BlackExcellistАй бұрын
Thank you for this summary
@KingSausage7425 күн бұрын
So does this mean using heaters is cheaper than the baseboard heaters?
@classicpontiac3724 күн бұрын
@@KingSausage74 If you are talking about electric baseboard heating, I would say no. If you have a boiler that burns gas or oil it may be cheaper to run a small space heater in your bedroom at night and turn back the heat in the entire house 5 or so degrees and just keep your bedroom to the desired temperature. I currently have oil heat in my house and I have a programmable thermostat set to drop the temperature back at night when I sleep. I just run the space heater to keep the bedroom cozy but don't need to keep the entire house that temperature. I don't have a huge house but on a mild winter I can get by burning 1 tank of heating oil in a season. I also have a fireplace so that helps also.
@rimmerd99085 жыл бұрын
It's nice to see a KZbinr actually calculating costs based on simple mathematics. I always get asked to do the same where I live in the Uk and most people don't understand, or care to understand the maths required to make an informed choice based on the real costs. Welll done for that..!
@TutorialGeek4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your comment! I am definitely a lover of spreadsheets!
@LanceisLawson6 жыл бұрын
Oil filled electric heaters produce the most even and comfortable heat. The only drawback to them is that they take a little while to warm up. However once up to temperature the heat is even and very quiet as well.
@artsymamanana2 жыл бұрын
Yup, My experience also!
@randybobandy98282 жыл бұрын
No, all electric heaters produce the exact same amount of heat per watt.
@rossmacleod42452 жыл бұрын
@@randybobandy9828 he didn’t say it produces more heat…. Just more even and comfortable
@johnboy85942 жыл бұрын
@@rossmacleod4245 and they are great for grow rooms
@chrish73362 жыл бұрын
Something most people don't realize as well is that the Thermostat on the Oil Filled Heaters(analog) do not measure the room temperature around the heater. It is a thermostat for the Oil. This is why it is so challenging to control temperatures with them. (Simplified Example) Heater set to med high heat (100). Oil temp reaches 100, heater turns off. Radiating oil heat continues. Oil temp drops to 95, heater turns back on. If you are trying to hold lets say 70 deg temps but the heater is set to a high temp, you will actually exceed 70 deg in the room. It is a balancing act between High Oil Temp, room temp, and outside ambient temp. Oil might need to be at 120 deg if the room is not well insulated and cooling faster to keep a steady 70 deg, or to even bring a large temp change as quick as possible. And yet once the room is warmed up with a well insulated room oil temp could be at around 71-72 deg to keep a room at 70.
@mikageyuki68736 жыл бұрын
I grow up at Malaysia that don’t have winter . 365 days every days is summer . This year move to Turkey during winter and don’t know anything about heater AT ALL . Thanks to your video a lot for sure cause it’s does give me the info that I needed most . Thanks .
@TutorialGeek6 жыл бұрын
Hope you can learn to enjoy the cold! It is not great all the time but sometimes it is super nice!
@robertharrold42145 жыл бұрын
That is great.i do the winter thing and hate it.england.
@bonnielipke19626 жыл бұрын
My apt has baseboard heat so I bought an infrared heater. Heats a large room quickly and creates a heat that doesn't dry out my air or me. I love it!
@paulnorton56702 жыл бұрын
this is one of the best surveys I've seen. very well done. thank you for clearing up the ceramic heater 'scenario'. well done.
@juanperdomor6 жыл бұрын
This is the best review I have seen so far of anything in KZbin thank you very much
@TutorialGeek6 жыл бұрын
This is the best comment I have received so far in KZbin. Thanks!
@LeBronJames-yr8ku4 жыл бұрын
This is a genuine and generous compliment. This video can make a difference in how people live and conserve energy.
@joeslacker10204 жыл бұрын
@@TutorialGeek can you plug an oil heater into a surge protector
@ginpok66403 жыл бұрын
I am a fan of oil filled radiators! Quiet (maybe too quiet, I have forgot to turn off a couple times) and mine is 30 years old and works like brand new. When I see the electric turn off and still feel the heat radiating from the fins I sleep like a baby!
@yeudoi6610 ай бұрын
I’m with you as a ac heating tech the radiator works great for me 😊
@BiffBifford3 жыл бұрын
I use an oil heater, and living in the mountains have found that the heat from the oil heater is comfortable and heats a room at an even temperature. If you heat during low energy hour times, they don't cost much to use if you put them on a low setting. My kids are grown, so I don't have to worry about someone knocking it over. I can also keep my room warm during the night when I am not using the room by leaving the oil heater on a low setting to keep the air temperature tempered and not too cold, making it easy to heat the room in a few minutes when turned up higher. I don't care for heaters with a fan that blows heated air because I have allergies and don't want to keep cleaning a filter. The oil heater seems to burn off the dust accumulated and requires less maintenance.
@AreYouKittenMeRtNow2 жыл бұрын
Good idea about keeping it on super low overnight
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
SPLIT or DUCTLESS heat pumps cost ~$800 and most efficient at single room heating. Then can produce upto 6 times more Watts of Heat than they use. (The units in the vid are only 1 time efficient.) That’s because they don’t actually make the heat. They just “pump” it from the outside air to the inside air (thereby concentrating the heat inside your building).
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
CERAMIC WITH FAN would have beat the fanless mica, if he had used the full 1500 watt setting. Ceramic fans heat-up rooms very quickly .
@summerforever67362 жыл бұрын
Seems like most people prefer the oil radiator
@iraira28182 ай бұрын
Thank You. I appreciate your honest words. In this video you're not trying to sell folks anything; you're just giving honest, good information. Thank you.
@blondetruther2 жыл бұрын
Excellent video - I just bought your favorite heater through your link - thanks!!
@Robert_L223 жыл бұрын
I love oil-filled heaters because they're quiet AND, once you have the temperature dialed-in, they radiate nice, even heat without drying out the air.
@The.Word.1Way.23863 жыл бұрын
they will dry out the air equal to any other electrical heater, and much more so than a open flamed gas, kerosene heater or open fire ...eg log/coal type heat
@TrueFork3 жыл бұрын
also probably the only type you can safely dry your wet socks on
@jonasstahl98263 жыл бұрын
@@The.Word.1Way.2386 Technical thats true, but heating has alot to do with how comfortable it feels.
@Boswd3 жыл бұрын
I to like the oil filled ones as well,. For the same reasons but also while it may take longer to heat up once you get it to where you want you can turn it off and it'll continue heating, leaving the room warmer for longer
@SilvaDreams3 жыл бұрын
Only problem with the oil filled ones they might claim to be 1500 watt but they'll max out at around 600watts before the oil boils and cuts off and constantly cycles the over-heat cut off switches which are not really intended to be cycled as much as they are so they have shorter life spans unless you know how to replace the sensor. So yes they are quiet because the loudest they'll be is the bubbling oil as it over heats but no they don't dry out the air less, they just heat the air less since as the higher the temperature the lower the humidity that can stay in the air... But it does have the perk of staying warmer and radiating heat even after it is turned off but that can be a down side too.
@dufus22736 жыл бұрын
I use a Pelonis oil filled heater on low [600 watts] all weather long here in north Idaho. no fans, no fire danger AND it's 100% efficient. twenty five to thirty five dollars on e-bay AND my coffee cup rests on top of it nicely. works for me. Doesn't eliminate all the humidity out of the room so my guitars don't get dry and crack. can't beat it. has more advantages but don't come to mind. good luck with your choice
@dufus22736 жыл бұрын
how do you know this?
@nobodyuknow24906 жыл бұрын
@@dufus2273 Ignore him, he's what's known as "a moron"... Bay Area electricity rates run 15.59c per kilowatt/hour (I found some San Francisco rates at 18.9c per kilowatt/hour) and Northern Idaho rates are about 8.67c per kilowatt/hour, if anything since he's a moron HE is paying nearly DOUBLE what you would have to pay for the same usage of power.
@captaincrunch17076 жыл бұрын
These are very efficient and definitely longer lasting than quartz infrared but take longer to heat and the thermostat on mine doesn't stop until around 70+ which bugs me. A timer used with one of these to turn it on an hour before waking up would be max efficient for space heaters. Just bought a quartz infrared to try them out but I'm just gonna fire up the wood stove. Lots of work and it's 80 degrees or nothing but it doesn't use any juice
@thisisoliverpahn5 жыл бұрын
Every electronic Heater is 100% efficient
@rocioramon24575 жыл бұрын
Wow, when I typed in the search bar I didn’t expect to get some home grown data, I expected to see a bunch of reviews and basically advertisements for particular sellers heaters, thank you so much for this!!! I too watched it all 😬
@tonypittsburgh95 жыл бұрын
Good video. I drop the house temperature at night 10 degrees and use an oil filled heater in the bedroom. I turn it on medium an hour before I go to bed and the room gets quite warm, then I put it on low and lower the thermostat to the around 20 percent of max so when the room temp drops, it kicks in at some point. When I wake up, the room is still quite warm.
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
SPLIT or DUCTLESS heat pumps cost ~$800 and most efficient at single room heating. Then can produce upto 6 times more Watts of Heat than they use. (The units in the vid are only 1 time efficient.) That’s because they don’t actually make the heat. They just “pump” it from the outside air to the inside air (thereby concentrating the heat inside your building).
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
Probably more efficient to leave the house temp at normal, but close all the vents. The rest of the house will get cold, but your bedroom still hot
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
In my house I really only heat two rooms: Bed and TV room during daytime. The other rooms rarely get used, so those vents are closed
@elmerbaez67843 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. I have an oil heater in my bathroom. I have it at 1 1/2 dial. It does keep my bathroom comfortable. I have 2 infrared heaters. One in the kitchen and one in the living room. Considering that we are going through an ice storm, I only keep my kitchen heater on for 5 hours on low. After that, I shut it off. I do not have my living room heater on. This helps to keep the electricity cost way down. I do wear a jacket and a hat. We can save money with these heaters, We just need to be resourceful. Throughout the day I only have my bathroom heater on, until the next morning, I start the whole routine again.
@wingmanalive6 жыл бұрын
I share my 900 sq ft home with my teenage son. I find that it's cheaper to simply heat the rooms we occupy rather than heat the entire home. It's also cheaper to conserve energy rather than produce it so make sure any/all drafty windows and doors get addressed. You also don't include gas heaters in your group, only electric. Naturally propane, kerosene and even butane heaters are far more expensive to use but are obviously ideal for power outages and emergency use. In my home I have at least 3 different sources of heat I can utilize if necessary. I love my Mr. Heater portable buddy and only need to run it for 15 minutes and it gets the room I'm in up to 70 degrees, then I shut it down for an hour or two, then repeat until bedtime. They're great not only for supplemental heat but also for camping, RVs, vanlife, ect.
@iunderstanphotography27805 жыл бұрын
This was a great service to all people looking to buy an electric heater. You satisfied my inner geek/comparison shopper wanting to buy a simple heater for my bedroom. This time I'm going to get a small ceramic, at the end of winter I think I'll buy another oil heater. Thanks for your months of research!
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
CERAMIC WITH FAN would have beat the fanless mica, if he had used the full 1500 watt setting. Ceramic fans heat-up rooms very quickly .
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
SPLIT or DUCTLESS heat pumps cost ~$800 and most efficient at single room heating. Then can produce upto 6 times more Watts of Heat than they use. (The units in the vid are only 1 time efficient.) That’s because they don’t actually make the heat. They just “pump” it from the outside air to the inside air (thereby concentrating the heat inside your building).
@korpman3 жыл бұрын
I and everyone who watched this video appreciate you sir !
@izaaksheets65862 жыл бұрын
Wow. That's how you do a review. Data. Fact. Research. This guy needs to do budget oversight for the federal govt. This is the most in depth review I've ever seen. Thank you for helping me decide what space heater to buy. Da y um....
@elvispresley3234 Жыл бұрын
The BEST analysis on YT. Great job.
@paulmoffat93066 жыл бұрын
I have an oil filled heater that seems to work fine - slow to heat up, but can have a steady output. Drawback - mine seems to have been painted in an oil based paint, that out-gasses when hot. 3 years later, it still smells.
@TechwithSTONE43 жыл бұрын
Thats the oil burning slowly, thats the smell not the paint lol
@craigjensen68533 жыл бұрын
@@TechwithSTONE4 How do you refill it? Is it just 10W40?
@Jesse-cx4si2 жыл бұрын
This guy is awesome! Great video and information. I’d prefer the mica heater but my wife likes to drape her towel over a heater while she showers, so we have to stick with the oil heater…or burn down our house. Our oil heater has lasted almost 20 years now.
@ChristCenteredMinist5 жыл бұрын
There are oil radiator heaters with digital readouts which makes easier to set. Plus, I put a fan behind mine to warm up room faster and stir air so more consistent heat in room.
@edstevens44395 жыл бұрын
Fan idea probably helpful......had one for a time....not much warmth unless right next to it....1500 watts...most of these heaters....thats all your going to get is 1500 watts worth.....not a whole lot,...
@LM-hb6yn4 жыл бұрын
Ceiling fan works best to move the heat that rises to the ceiling and circulate it around the room. Plus it's cheap to run.
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
SPLIT or DUCTLESS heat pumps cost ~$800 and most efficient at single room heating. Then can produce upto 6 times more Watts of Heat than they use. (The units in the vid are only 1 time efficient.) That’s because they don’t actually make the heat. They just “pump” it from the outside air to the inside air (thereby concentrating the heat inside your building).
@JCzCmngALZ11 ай бұрын
BRAVO. You EXPLAINED things. I watched 3 different vids from 3 different guys showing off the oil radiator type. "It has THREE power settings." And?????? Idk what that means or what that does. All 3 said nothing more than "It has THREE power settings" except "Low, Med, & High". And????? So thank you for 1) reviewing FOUR different types; 2) being so thorough with the features AND the pros & cons AND the expense differences.... Much appreciated.
@thomasthrift3493 жыл бұрын
Just so you know no sticker is needed when the video is as informative as yours was and for that I thank you. Details mean everything, charts help immensely, stay warm out there!
@DsSimpleEdits2 жыл бұрын
Took your advice and bought myself a micathermic heater... Best decision ever! Thanks a million for doing all the research and providing a real solution! Btw, there is no noise at all! That's the most important feature for me 👍
@davecruz98932 жыл бұрын
I like when a normal person does and extensive like testing....it makes it seem real and not a commercial....I do appreciate all your work.....TY...
@chasmarischen44596 жыл бұрын
1500 watts equals approx 5600 BTU, that is all you can expect from ANY space heater. The real determining factors are the cubic feet of the area to heat and how well you can hold that heat in that area, ie insulate.
@TutorialGeek6 жыл бұрын
I think that is the key. Understanding your room and making sure you heat fast and don't lose that heat. Thanks for your comment!
@garybob46 жыл бұрын
this was going to be my comment - thanks for beating me to it!
@ahhwe-any74345 жыл бұрын
So a small plug in heater in a small room is not so bad? 🤔 Oh well. I only use it when taking a shower. Otherwise, it's cold in there :/. I close off rooms.
@clairewood90383 жыл бұрын
I’ve never seen such a thorough review and I look for reviews on everything! This has given me real help, answered questions I had, and now I know which heater to buy. Honestly I’ve never been helped by a review so much. Thank you 🙏 from 🇬🇧
@lisadelace68632 жыл бұрын
very different now with oil/price/global supply chain issues/ukraine/russian shit
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
SPLIT or DUCTLESS heat pumps cost ~$800 and most efficient at single room heating. Then can produce upto 6 times more Watts of Heat than they use. (The units in the vid are only 1 time efficient.) That’s because they don’t actually make the heat. They just “pump” it from the outside air to the inside air (thereby concentrating the heat inside your building).
@marthaadams83263 жыл бұрын
I bought the oil filled radiator this year to replace the infrared (because they are not as good for as long as they used to be) and because I have a German Shepherd service dog and the fan in the heaters collected her fur so bad that it was blowing a lot of allergens into the room. The radiator type holds the heat. The sides of my long ranch house stay colder than the middle and keep the house comfortable and turning down the HVAC thermostat at night and just use the radiator in the BR.
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
SPLIT or DUCTLESS heat pumps cost ~$800 and most efficient at single room heating. Then can produce upto 6 times more Watts of Heat than they use. (The units in the vid are only 1 time efficient.) That’s because they don’t actually make the heat. They just “pump” it from the outside air to the inside air (thereby concentrating the heat inside your building).
@whitemorn Жыл бұрын
I use a two part system in my 14'X14' rented room. When I wake up in the Winter, the room is around 60f, which is how I like to sleep. I get up and turn on the coffee pot and a built in wall heater which has a fan. That is my primary heater to warm up the room with. I also use an oil filled radiator which I keep on very low at night to keep the room from going below 60f. On top of that radiator I have a cookie baking sheet with a wet car washing mitt on top of it that I wet with hot water before going to bed. I also turn this up to the highest point of the 600W setting, and put my butter container on top of the wet mitt to start softening the butter up and go back to bed for 30 or so minutes until the room is warm. The reason for the wet mitt is for room humidity which is crucial for preventing respiratory infections and dry crusty nostrils. I used to maintain the humidity regulators in the operating rooms of a local hospital which had to be kept near 36 % humidity to prevent the patients from getting infections in their surgical areas. Once the room has heated I turn down the wall heater to about half way depending on the outside air temperature (OSA), and I also turn down the radiator heater to about half way on the 600W setting. That keeps my butter solid, yet still soft and ready for my breakfast. The Mitt has a 1 inch sponge inside so it can hold a fair amount of water without dripping. It has a sheeps wool fabric on one side and a vinyl webbing on the other. The sheeps wool should face down on the pan and the webbing upward. To keep the pan from sliding off, I drilled holes in the sides of the cookie sheet and fastened it with copper wire through the fins of the radiator. You can also warm up foods in a glass dish or ceramic cup, like cheese sauce etc.. but for that I remove the mitt. Then at night I turn the wall heater off and the radiator very low.
@sindollface6 жыл бұрын
Much appreciated!! I've been going in circles online looking to buy a couple heaters. My apartment isn't well insulated & windows r terrible. The work I have to do on them every winter isn't fun. So I thank u for saving me lots of time
@kkarllwt6 жыл бұрын
Spend your first money on sealing the windows. You can lose half the heat from leaky windows. There are a lot of youtube videos on window sealing and building inside storm windows.
@sindollface6 жыл бұрын
@@kkarllwt inside storm windows? expensive?
@joescheller66806 жыл бұрын
better check with your land lord most do not allow these type of heaters
@CrackerFL6 жыл бұрын
Great video! I'm a fan of oil filled. Gives off heat between cycles, and no noisey fan going on/off.
@JohnSmith-ns6dp3 жыл бұрын
Yeah but they take all day to heat up the room.
@MyWasteOfTime2 жыл бұрын
You missed one of the main points of heaters "Comfort". An oil filled heater takes a while to heat up but keeps the room at a constant temperature without kick on and making you hot and then off making you cold. It's a constant temperature, giving you a more comfortable room...
@azarelthecreator70982 ай бұрын
heat from oil heaters stays right up against it and using a fan to circulate it cools the fins and reduces heat output. I tried to heat my rv living room with one and it never warmed the space but every other type of electric heater does. Oil filled heaters are the absolute worse.
@MyWasteOfTime2 ай бұрын
@@azarelthecreator7098 "Stay right up against it" that isn't how heat works... But yes I agree having a ceiling fan helps!
@carvedwood1953Ай бұрын
@@azarelthecreator7098 hard to count the ways this is wrong lol
@scotttousey227Ай бұрын
@@azarelthecreator7098i have one and it works great for me it was mid 40s last nite i had it in my bedroom and it was on very low it got hot so i turned it off maby if its 10 or 20 degrees out maby it dont work so good. December 4th 2024 florida
@Mighty-VizioN20 күн бұрын
I guess it really depends on the type of oil heater you got. I've noticed some oil heaters don't have much oil in them so they don't get very hot. But it seems like the older oil heaters, when you move them around you can hear the oil sloshing. And they get really hot. I had one that had my entire basement burn it up. And then when I bought a new one it couldn't even get a small bedroom heated up
@samlai54112 жыл бұрын
Watched the whole video. Thanks for the detailed info. I was gonna got an oil fin heater, but now my mind has swung to the mica heater.
@leolo22223 жыл бұрын
With all electric heaters, it's all about the wattage. If 2 devices are both using 1500 watts, they are putting the same exact amount of heat into the room, the only difference could be the delivery of that heat. For example, the oil filled radiator is just using convection while one of those small brick units may use a fan to blow warm air around. So from a whole room perspective any 1500 watt heater puts the same amount of heat in the room.
@backcountyrpilot2 жыл бұрын
I agree, except that a fan, and to a much lesser extent, a lighted control, convert some of the wattage to light, rather than heat, so they are less efficient.
@randybobandy98282 жыл бұрын
Precisely. It doesn't matter what type you use, the wattage is the only factor.
@randybobandy98282 жыл бұрын
@@backcountyrpilot you are talking .00001% of the power used for a light or fan since the fan and light also produce heat.
@maudiojunky2 жыл бұрын
Right? I had a good laugh when he pulled out the spreadsheet and tried to claim heating a room hotter/faster is more efficient. Anyone who knows basic electricity and thermodynamics should realize the efficiency is solely determined by your house's insulation and sealing if you want to heat a room since producing heat is the one process that is 100% efficient. That being said, if you want to heat yourself and your seating area then a heater with a dish radiator pointed at your sitting position is almost certainly the most efficient since you don't need to warm the entire room in that circumstance.
@sanjaybhatikar2 жыл бұрын
Not quite right, the oil- filled heaters come on and off to a thermostat so if the heating element is on only a third of the time, your heater rated at 1500 Watts is consuming 500 Watts. Please see KZbinr Mathias Wendell’s video on the topic. 😊
@lynnchello72316 жыл бұрын
1500 watts (120vac) can only give you 5100 Btus no matter what heater it is. The btu load loss is determined by how well the room is insulated. Other than that very good info.
@terencehawkes39332 жыл бұрын
Right. The amount of heat delivered by all types of heaters is exactly the same. The only real difference is how it is delivered: by convection, infrared radiation, or forced air.
@lukeasacher9 күн бұрын
Yes indeed- the laws of thermodynamics and electromagnetism cannot be changed...
@vprice5094 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the video. When I had a small apartment I loved my oil-filled radiator. It was certainly cheaper than the baseboard heaters. Pro tip- get a DeLonghi or other Italian radiator. Why? Italians know how to make boilers and pumps. (The city of Venice; Italians invented espresso machines). I bought a cheaper one several years ago. It worked well until it failed within a week of purchase and leaked oil all over the floor.
@silverhustlin13904 жыл бұрын
Would it heat my 400sq ft home?? Thanks
@vprice5094 жыл бұрын
@@silverhustlin1390 Yes. Easily.
@ahmadalghali905 жыл бұрын
you are so original .. so unique .. so informative... so helpful ... Bless your soul.
@basanth5996 ай бұрын
I love the way u did the thorough analysis with supporting data.. thank you so much
@kimmer62 жыл бұрын
The oil filled heater is my favorite and is the safest. I put it on low range, 800 watts, and put it next to the couch where I will spend time on my laptop. I throw a blanket over it and myself and let the heat build up under the blanket. The thermostat dial is marked and set to1/3 of the high setting. This combination makes for a very comfortable time in a cold house. I plugged it in to the EcoFlow during a power outage and it tends to be easy on the battery state of charge. I hear only a click from thermostat once in a while and otherwise it makes no sounds at all.
@LM-hb6yn4 жыл бұрын
I found that using a ceiling fan set in reverse along with an oil heater, infrared or probably any space heater for that matter will circulate the heat and move it from the ceiling around the room. Helps the heater to heat a large room more effectively, quickly and uniformly, and it's extremely cheap to run.
@The.Word.1Way.23863 жыл бұрын
insulation is key
@OmmerSyssel3 жыл бұрын
@@The.Word.1Way.2386 excactly, unbelievable how many people is unaware of this simple fact. We started insulating all housing in the late 70'ies and building regulations has been increasing in demand every ten years or so.. Many in UK still has zero clue about this topic, and prefer dealing with extraordinary expenses and unhealthy living places!
@The.Word.1Way.23863 жыл бұрын
@@OmmerSyssel yes, even a bookcase against a wall will insulate
@crmendi1 Жыл бұрын
You are right. Hot air goes up and cold down. Thus, a ceiling fan in reverse helps moving the hot air downwards.
@vinquinn Жыл бұрын
It's not only cheap to run the ceiling fan, but it is absolutely free when you are heating electrically. The fan motor gives off some heat also to the room. Lights are also free. You don't save any money by turning them off.
@curiouspilot6 жыл бұрын
One of the most useful videos I've watched, and I don't say that lightly. Subbed!
@jonathancochran75964 жыл бұрын
I first watched this video over a year ago and as a result purchased a mica panel heater. I’ve been very happy with it and actually just purchased two more for other parts of my older, not very well insulated, two story home. Anyway - I came across this video again when trying to organize my Favorites folder and decided to re-watch it. I love your friendly, direct style and your attention to detail (great spreadsheets!). Your blue eyes are pretty nice too! Thank-you for going to the trouble to share your research!! Looking forward to checking out some of your other videos!!
@OnGuard3SКүн бұрын
I use a delonghi mica board heater in my home office, and i love it. It is silent, and puts out plenty of heat. The best thing for me is that it doesn't dry out my skin like most other space heaters.
@male42nfree2 жыл бұрын
Outstanding! Great work! I can't thank you enough for all the time you put into this effort, not to mention on the superb way you delivered your results. I use space heaters in two rooms of my home where the 1950s era forced hot-air duct system doesn't work well. I have used milk-box, oil filled, infrared, and ceramic heaters - all with varying degrees of results (forgive the unintended pun). Your observation / conclusion of turning the space heater to its highest setting to heat a well insulated room as quickly as possible for maximum efficiency (least cost) was a true revelation for me.
@lukanikic4950 Жыл бұрын
I agree with you, what an outstanding work, really good results!
@singularity-4 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. My electricity bills during the winter make even buying enough food difficult, and now that I'm able to work from home, it's safe for me to use a space heater, so I'm hoping this year I can keep my place at an okay temperature and not be in debt at the end of the season because of it.
@allwellbud3 жыл бұрын
Not sure how cold place you live in, wear more warm clothes. Good socks, one boxer brief and one boxer and other warm clothes.
@nishalp17473 жыл бұрын
Well done. Easy to understand, covered all points I am interested in. Honest, fair comparison, no biasing.
@mosfet5002 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the work you did on this. One problem with heating the room very fast is that the walls, furniture, etc. don't absorb all the heat so the room cools faster and the unit has to cycle more until the room reaches mean temps. This is why oil filled may be the best overall solution.
@johnjingleheimersmith92592 жыл бұрын
tf are you talking about? It doesn't matter. People really need to understand electrical and thermodynamic sciences better. Most of these ceramic heaters actually heat the air really fast. Over time the heat will transfer from the air to the furniture and walls. Conversely an oil heater also does the same thing just incredibly slower because it must heat up the mass of the oil first. There's no advantage to that. Who cares if it cycles more times? At least the ceramic heaters will heat the actual air in the room. The oil heaters will cause most heat to slowly travel upward toward the ceiling, you know, where most people aren't, and cause most of it to be lost unless you leave it on for ridiculous amounts of time. At least with the ceramic, it's 1) fast at heating the air, and 2) spreads the heat around more quickly so that it CAN actually transfer some of that energy into the furniture and walls and floors, instead of just going up the ceiling until hours later when it finally fills the entire room. Therefore, you're more likely to save more money with the ceramic as you run it less overall and the heat is in a place you use it and is not being lost thru the ceiling as much. Ultimately the best are probably all the radiative style heaters because they heat "black bodies" or YOU and your furniture directly. instead of your house.
@mosfet5002 жыл бұрын
@@johnjingleheimersmith9259 Both have a COP of ~1 so it depends on the amount of time you are in the room, the size of the room and what you're looking for. Ceramics cycle on and off, that's not a constant room temp, it depends on the hysteresis of the heater. You're not at a constant temp until the room approaches the set heat level, the human body senses that difference. Cycling with oil filled is different because the heat doesn't stop instantly, there's residual temp and you don't have a large temperature differential, it's also easier to control the temp. So, yes, until the room itself absorbs the heat oil filled is a more comfortable option. Over a long period where the room absorbs both systems they're the same and consume relatively the same power. If you're sitting in a room with an oil radiator next to you I think you're better off than heating the whole room room with air blowing around. My wife likes the fact that the oil radiator doesn't make noise and blow air and dust around or at her. No filters to clean either, so there are pluses and minuses to both systems, they're both inefficient, you need a heat pump before you begin to realize a higher COP. "tf"? Clean up your act and learn to be civil.
@johnjingleheimersmith92592 жыл бұрын
@@mosfet500 Don't make inane statements that induce such a reaction and you'll get less of them
@mosfet5002 жыл бұрын
@@johnjingleheimersmith9259 I clarified and supported my statement, address that.
@93vincentvalentine Жыл бұрын
@@johnjingleheimersmith9259 tbh both of yous can get fked.
@19664254 күн бұрын
My delonghi oil filled heater that I've had for 5 years is the best thing I ever bought for my bedroom. Has wheels, digital display and you can program it. Heats great.
@JTA196116 күн бұрын
One in a million...obviously not sponsored. Much appreciated. I subscribed.
@rockeyrocket12245 жыл бұрын
My system is simple 1st make sure your well insulated, 2nd the oil filled heater set to a very low setting something like between 60 and 65 degrees in a main room. Then an old Christmas tin container with holes punched into the lid and upper 1/4 and a 3 wick candle inside to create a foot heater. I find that with a little candle heater combined with the low demand on the oil heater and just using extra quilts at bedtime, that is enough to live frugally without too much discomfort. My view is that I do not need summer time in the winter, I don't want to be so detached from nature. Also I have a back up system if we have an extended power interruption consisting of a kerosene heater and a couple of lanterns. The fuel is expensive for them but it s stores well and will keep year after year if not used.
@belindaintexas87892 жыл бұрын
Just make sure not to use paraffin candles which outgas chemicals.
@robertheitner15346 жыл бұрын
The oil filled heaters are by far the best, the are the most safe and by far the cheapest. I tested 2 oil filled heaters set on 600 watts against an edenpure quartz set at 1500 watts. The two oil filled produced more heat, even though they were using 1200 watts versus 1500, and they would occasionally cycle off, using much less power at that point. They are the most inexpensive to buy and operate. I use them to assist heat in cold rooms and even heat outside buildings (well insulated) to a normal living temperature. I always run them at 600 watts, the most efficient.
@swift43113 жыл бұрын
Agreed . the oil heaters I hated beacuse I never had before! About 3 years ago I bought one than I reailzed they are very good and safe especially with thermostat and last year I got another one..best time to by heaters is end of the season
@FateBoost3 жыл бұрын
@@swift4311 One of my family members had one and ran it for 18 hours as a test, it warmed up a large room from 15c to about 19c, but cost almost £6!
@plop0102 жыл бұрын
that's physically impossible
@FrauIndian Жыл бұрын
Hello. Can you recommend a brand pls?
@edmondedwards67294 жыл бұрын
I knew a firefighter who fought a fire that originated in the oil filled heater. Apparently, the thermostat stuck to the on position and the heat range was set to high, or 1500w. The oil heated up to the point that the pressure inside burst the casing, squirting hot oil onto the floor, causing the fire. I would suggest using any oil heater at the low, or 600w position. If the thermostat sticks in the on position, it would not likely get hot enough to cause a fire.
@louisfriend18513 жыл бұрын
Thats a lie. Thats a definite lie.
@Milan_M953 жыл бұрын
All kind of heaters should have a safety thermostat
@deevnn2 жыл бұрын
@@louisfriend1851 Agreed...
@kerryknight2284 жыл бұрын
I appreciate the effort you put into this. We only have space heaters and I never know which ones are efficient. I subbed right away, this is very helpful!
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
SPLIT or DUCTLESS heat pumps cost ~$800 and most efficient at single room heating. Then can produce upto 6 times more Watts of Heat than they use. (The units in the vid are only 1 time efficient.) That’s because they don’t actually make the heat. They just “pump” it from the outside air to the inside air (thereby concentrating the heat inside your building).
@Modeltnick2 жыл бұрын
Been using the oil filled heater for years and very happy with the performance and safety of it.
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
SPLIT or DUCTLESS heat pumps cost ~$800 and most efficient at single room heating. Then can produce upto 6 times more Watts of Heat than they use. (The units in the vid are only 1 time efficient.) That’s because they don’t actually make the heat. They just “pump” it from the outside air to the inside air (thereby concentrating the heat inside your building).
@raymondj87686 жыл бұрын
i love my oil filled heater it goes on n off and keeps me warm on low .
@JL-ln9qh3 жыл бұрын
I use it as a permanent fixture near the window of an exterior wall to combat heat loss thru the poorly insulated wall and window. Due to the poor insulation of the home and constraints of the furance ductwork design, the second floor doesn't heat well. My oil radiator helps keep an even temperature in the space 11ftx12ft, on the lowest setting 600W. Even on really cold days where the temperature in the room would otherwise be 3 or 4 degrees below the thermostat (located on main floor) setpoint, the radiator makes it comfortable and consistent. Don't know that I'd use it to be the soul source of heat for the room (especially a larger one), in the instance where there was no furnace heat. The middle and high settings cut out intermittently on the high temperature limit switch at higher integral thermostat settings, and such safety switches are not intended for controlling regular operation.
@laurha41213 жыл бұрын
which is nice heater 1200W or 2400W which is better the higher w or the lower w?
@drury2d83 жыл бұрын
I have an oil heater from the 1990s. Still works well! Unbreakable!
@berenjena49986 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much ! This is one of the best reviews I have ever seen on KZbin !
@titania1453 жыл бұрын
Great info..I just bought an oil filled radiator to heat the hall and washroom areas in my condo. It works great, is safe and it has wheels so doesn't matter if it's heavy. I like them because we used them all winter long 24/7 in the cottage without any problems 👍
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
SPLIT or DUCTLESS heat pumps cost ~$800 and most efficient at single room heating. Then can produce upto 6 times more Watts of Heat than they use. (The units in the vid are only 1 time efficient.) That’s because they don’t actually make the heat. They just “pump” it from the outside air to the inside air (thereby concentrating the heat inside your building).
@garygoldstein3273 жыл бұрын
I love my Mica Panel heater in how fast the heater works. The down side is that the power cord get's hot and causes the outlet wiring to get red hot and melts the insulation in side the wall outlet and poses a fire hazard. If any one has one do not leave yours unattended as the wall outlet could become so hot that it starts a fire inside the walls before you even notice smoke seep thru the outlet holes.
@KingdomUploader2 жыл бұрын
dude; are sure you didn't just get a lemon? I've used a mica style for 2 winters now and my cord never gets hot - and i added a 6' appliance cord to it. Now i Did have a very old oil filled melt like that but after replacing the plug i haven't have the issue...yet
@TomBVoxman2 күн бұрын
Wow, that’s terrifying. How is it going three years later?
@f.demascio18572 жыл бұрын
We have been using our oil filled heater in the living room for the recent cold spells. 400 sq/ft room stays at 75 deg.F on High/3. We have a fan assisted quartz heater in the bedroom. Heats up fast on high, maintains comfortable temperatures on low. We usually turn it of around midnight.
@summerforever67362 жыл бұрын
What model?
@alfamale95256 жыл бұрын
You seem to be sad. Please don't be You give joy and hope to folks who have little to spare for comfort...... What a blessing to help so many and to ask for so little..... You are admired for this shared effort you have given, even though it was difficult to do. Blessings to you.
@genielaury26 күн бұрын
To me doesn’t seem sad at all!!💕🌈✝️😀💕
@utah1336 жыл бұрын
Electric heaters are all 100% efficient. It's the one energy conversion device that is. Other than the minor issue of fans, the electric power is all converted to heat. Choices are all esthetics and what mix of radiant and convection you desire.
@absenteeatom3 жыл бұрын
I was looking for this comment - fully agree
@PRINCESSDREAMYLYN6 жыл бұрын
I've used Oil Filled heaters since 2006 and cut my electric bill in about half and never when back to using forced air/central heat since. 4 of then heat my home all winter. they store away spring summer and fall and only come out when it gets cold. They work so much more efficiently and your not blasted with cold air like central heat . My choice will continue with the oil filled heater until something comes along that's even better.
@stacieupchurch97756 жыл бұрын
I just commented the same thing and then I read yours. Like you, I will never give mine up.
@PRINCESSDREAMYLYN6 жыл бұрын
@@shannon6352 I dont have a favorite brand, they are all made the same or equally as good. I will say when I turn mine on I turn on let the room warm up when it's comfortable i lower temp till it clicks off. then i leave it alone after that i don't really mess with it unless i have to. and there will be times you will need to adjust just not often. they are not instant heat it's radiant heat if you turn it off an on when it's cold u will have to wait a while for things to warm up. so it's better to set and leave alone and up if gets colder down if gets to warm but do it in small amounts till your happy and comfy :)
@geoffdearth73605 жыл бұрын
You're
@stevenshapiro42132 жыл бұрын
Very helpful, thank you. A mate of mine go back and forth about what kind of space heater works best and your experiment answered all our questions. I would think any company that manufactures or markets heaters would be foolish not using your study.
@knightish3 жыл бұрын
Amazing analysis. So many options out there and in 15 min you taught me how to buy a space heater. Kudos from one excel guy to another.
@psdaengr9116 жыл бұрын
The most efficient space heaters are incandescent lamps. You need light to see by anyway, and 100% of an incandescent lamps energy is converted to heat when the light is absorbed by the surfaces, and no air exchange is needed. As I've converted from incandescent to fluorescent to LED, my electrical bill went down but my winter gas consumption rose. The second most efficient space heater is a kitchen oven. All its energy goes into the space, and the small amount of air infiltration necessary is less per btu than a typical furnace. If you want to get the most bang for your bucks, install thermal draperies and close the doors to unoccupied rooms.
@wishingb58593 жыл бұрын
I consider a heating pad the best concept. 40 watts on medium. Versus 400 watts for some electric blankets.
@skosharocks13544 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for this. I recently purchased an electric fireplace and I love it! Looking to buy something smaller and more easily portable for another bedroom. You really helped me out here! Thanks again!
@frankrodriguez53805 жыл бұрын
Can’t believe I just sat here and watched the whole video but so glad I did. Thanks for taking the time to educate me with sum need to know tips and advice👍definitely need to do more study videos 💯
@ghostboatsofsouthernmichig377316 күн бұрын
If you place a small fan 6 inch or so on low speed behind the oil filled heater it circulates the warm air around the room nicely ❤
@jasone39623 жыл бұрын
I have about 180 to 200 sq ft living room and I use a ceramic 755520 Lasko tower heater with digital display. It's about 7 years old but it actually keeps my room at 65 degrees where I like it. I use it during the winter because my heater that heats the whole house leaves some spots in the house cold. For instance my living room is freezing during the winter but the bedrooms are hot as hell because there's two vents in each bedroom and only one heater vent in the living room which makes no sense. I have guinea pigs and they can't live in cold temperatures so I used that Lasko tower heater to keep the room at 65 degrees and it works great
@fngonuts6 жыл бұрын
Love my oil filled. Got two of them ( both are about 20 years old) out in the one car attached garage in Iowa. Only one is currently and constantly on (600watt/900watt,1500 max watts). I currently have the 600-watt switch on only, and the dial thermostat is at about 75%. I'm guessing it's at approximately 400/450 watts output at that setting. It's currently 21.9 degrees outside and 37 degrees in the garage. I utilize a wireless thermometer sensor at approx. 24 feet away (complete opposite end of the garage) from the heater, placed on the floor right next to the 7X9 foot (new/ish Clopay with R-18 insulation) garage door. I figure that's gotta be the coldest spot in the garage. Just fine with me. As the reviewer said.. wear a jacket. I also got me a pair of flannel lined carpenter jeans (gravel gear) from northern tool recently. $25.00 shipped to my door. A medium duty jacket and some longjohns or lined jeans., a pair of jersey gloves,.and I'm good to go. I've even stepped outside at freezing temps to do some handheld spray painting (timing chain cover, water neck etc). I then set the parts on top of the heater to dry and cure. I even set a couple items I want to be on the ready about a foot and a half up, directly above the heater on the windowsill (a couple cans of spray paint and my bic lighters). Works awesome.
@FeralCatSanctuary3 жыл бұрын
Great help. I always wondered about my oil-filled heaters, and now I know. Saving money on heat is really important to me since I am a terrible person to be around if I am cold. Thanks again for all of your hard work!!
@OmmerSyssel3 жыл бұрын
Don't be fooled by sales nonsense.. The amount of energy is excactly the same, never mind which source you are using! Try study insulation possibilities, instead of following physical nonsense.. ;)
@dw34032 жыл бұрын
@@OmmerSyssel The oil itself becomes a heat sink. Once that oil is heated it will cycle off and come on to keep it heated where as others run a fan and the element pretty much constantly.
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
Electric heating is 1:1. Burn 1500 watts electric and get 1500 watts heat.
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
Oil heating adds the inefficiency of heating 2 different things: Oil & then the air. Ceramic heats the air directly without the extra step.
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
Adding a fan improves efficiency by heating the whole area. Without a fan, the heat stays concentrated in one spot (not great)
@jollyandwaylo6 жыл бұрын
In my well-insulated home, the oil filled heaters are my only source of heat. I have the main one that stays on all winter, in the bathroom with a quartz heater that I turn on when I take a shower because of the infrared instant heat . That one heater on low heats the whole house to about 64 degrees F. for most of the winter. I find that a constant heat to a certain level is more efficient than trying to quickly heat up a room unless I am only going to be in that room rarely. My home is only 950 sq ft so it isn't difficult to keep warm enough for me. If I bake things, the gas stove heats up the house even more while cooking. For women, I suggest warm socks, slippers and a quartz heater extra as women seem to be cooler than men.
@jollyandwaylo6 жыл бұрын
@@shannon6352 The oil filled heaters are all pretty similar as far as I can tell. I suppose some are made with higher quality switches but you can't tell that unless you take it apart. I don't like to leave heaters on that have hot coils like ceramic heaters because of the fire danger. The oil filled heaters are great even with little children because they can't burn themselves or turn a knob and make it dangerously hot.
@TheGardenerNorth3 жыл бұрын
So anyone who puts together a spreadsheet to do reviews I'm subscribing. Nice Analytical review. I was looking for information on greenhouse heaters but can easily apply this to my needs. Thanks and Cheers!
@k.b.tidwell3 күн бұрын
I've always had space heaters but I've honestly never heard of a mica panel version. Good video!
@RawFitChris5 жыл бұрын
I found that a ceramic heater under my desk dried my eyes the heck out. I use a 700w oil filled heater under there now- much better. No fan.
@LeBronJames-yr8ku4 жыл бұрын
I know this struggle. It's real.
@eb61954 жыл бұрын
I like oil filled too for the same reasons. The plants in my office prefer it too.
@jnoland135 жыл бұрын
Love the careful and thought out scientific processes! Thank you for the work you’ve put into this video
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
SPLIT or DUCTLESS heat pumps cost ~$800 and most efficient at single room heating. Then can produce upto 6 times more Watts of Heat than they use. (The units in the vid are only 1 time efficient.) That’s because they don’t actually make the heat. They just “pump” it from the outside air to the inside air (thereby concentrating the heat inside your building).
@electrictroy20102 жыл бұрын
CERAMIC WITH FAN would have beat the fanless mica, if he had used the full 1500 watt setting. Ceramic fans heat-up rooms very quickly .
@sonyagriffy5 жыл бұрын
Great video! Thank you for all the work that you did, you answered so many questions I had. Going to go buy a new oil heater. Thank you again for sharing.
@keithmcgarrigle89212 жыл бұрын
You can get a electronic thermostat that plugs into your socket, and the heater plugs into the thermostat, which automatically keeps room at the set temperature, you set remote control the desired temperature. You keep the remote control close to you. The temperature with the one a bought will control the room to about 1degree it is controlled by a radio signal, so remote does not have be pointed towards the socket. Saving money, if you do not realise the heater has over heated the room. Also they are not expensive.
@summerforever67362 жыл бұрын
What a great job you did! Thanks for taking the time to share all this!
@aaronalquiza96804 жыл бұрын
infrared heaters reduce condensation (and eventually mold) since it doesn't warm the air (moisture carrier) but objects.
@skyelark1554 жыл бұрын
So which do you recommend please
@dtester3 жыл бұрын
This sounds like another loaded claim of the manufacture....similar to how a lot of companies would claim "efficiency". It's probably somewhat true, but they are putting a spin on it to make it sound impressive. All heaters technical would help prevent condensation by not letting the area get cold enough to the dew point. Warming the air or an object would not matter because a warm object will heat the air around it ...and everything is surrounded by the same air as we don't live in a vacuum. If you really have problems with moisture then you might want to looking it the reducing the humidity of the air.
@kathyfann6 жыл бұрын
Thank You so much because I needed this information because we cannot wast any money
@SLFYSH6 жыл бұрын
That was an excellent review-in that it is very helpful and time well spent to understand the specific strengths and weaknesses of each type. Thank you.
@lorrainechamberlain7818 Жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed your video. It’s such a boring topic, but your detailed, direct approach made it interesting the whole time. Too many people do a lot of filler-mumbling, which is just annoying. I did, however, like the added comments at the end…not being able to predict the future & all. That cracked me up! Great job.💕
@TheLastEmail4 жыл бұрын
Thank You , I was using ceramic heater heating my room and it cost so much. Glad I see this report and help me to decide what to buy "and" how to use it efficiently.
@DIYTechnician5 жыл бұрын
Wow man good space heater study, stats, and overall advice. Good work!
@9thbitvideos7302 жыл бұрын
Here in UK have been using lengths of tin foil (US: aluminium foil) behind radiators stuck to wall and It radiates the heat back into the room , pretty sure this will work with some of the heaters used here too but obviously the heaters placed need to be next to the walls for the benefits
@TheDMcGinley4 жыл бұрын
It's like taking a class with a very professional textbook science teacher. Amazing look at space heaters, and so thoroughly tested and researched. This is why geeks are really the coolest, and Big Bang Theory is so popular. Fantastic job and thanks for all of your work! Fantastic, now I can make an educated choice. Safe travels!
@michael50892 жыл бұрын
How you doing Dan?👍
@sx20Ramar8 сағат бұрын
I've been using a Big Buddy propane heater in my living room with a 20lb tank, for the last 12 or so winters. Keeps my oil bill lower and on medium, heats living & dining room.
@laragreene83284 жыл бұрын
I've owned every type of space heater there is....and honestly though I didnt think it would be in the beginning but the oil filled was my favorite! I could feel the heat better and longer with it!! I could also shut it off and still feel the heat from the heater/it stayed hot awhile! Also one time I had a baseboard type heater(it was long and not high at all.I forgot what they were called but it always too heated the room up faster and the room stayed hotter!! I havent seen one of those in a long while! And both used less electricity!!