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Old 09-06-2022, 07:15 PM   #1
SailinAway
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Originally Posted by LikeLakes View Post
What I prefer are oil filled space heaters. They heat up, nearly all have 3 heat settings where low is around 400 watts, medium 800, and high closer to 1500 IIRC. They don't project the heat like a resistance heater with a fan but the key is to turn it on before you are using the room and leave it on if you are only going out of the room for a few hours. They are completely safe while other space heaters are not.
I have to caution you against getting nonchalant about oil-filled space heaters (the upright radiator type). I had three of these. Over time, two of them began to split at the seams and leaked oil, ruining a wood floor. The third one almost burned down my house. I left it turned off but plugged in. It caused a short circuit at the wall outlet. Sparks were shooting out of the wall. Fortunately I was in the room when it happened. I believe these were De Longhis.

I really liked these heaters at first, but they all gave out after a couple of years. I found many complaints online about the safety of these units. Info found online:

"Fires occur when the oil leaks or is accidentally spilled from the crack into the floor. This oil can not only ruin porous surfaces, it can also catch fire if it’s close to heating element, resulting in dangerous fire."

Re recall of Sunbeam heaters from the Consumer Product Safety Commission: "The firm has received approximately 40 reports of units that unexpectedly sprayed heated oil, resulting in reports of property damage involving damaged carpet and fabrics."

"Underwriters Laboratories (UL) found that oil heaters filled with unsuitable oil, such as oil with a low flash point, can present a risk of fire."

"King of Fans Inc. has received 81 reports of incidents involving leaking oil. Two minor burns were reported, along with two reports of falls in the oil."

Holmes recall: "A poor electrical connection within the heater can lead to overheating. This poses fire and thermal burn hazards."

Etc. Please be careful. I wouldn't sleep with these running at night.
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Old 09-06-2022, 08:10 PM   #2
LikeLakes
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Thank you, I wasn't aware of those problems, will do some reading. I've used them for many years with zero issues, which doesn't mean I won't take your comments seriously and look into it.

I do think that if you looked at fires caused by space heaters, open element fan driven space heaters would be the #1 cause, either too close to curtains or furniture or something falling on one that catches on fire. I don't have research to prove the above, however it's my impression.
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Old 09-07-2022, 07:01 AM   #3
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Red face Oopsy on Radiant vs Infrared

Quote:
Originally Posted by SailinAway View Post
I have to caution you against getting nonchalant about oil-filled space heaters (the upright radiator type). I had three of these. Over time, two of them began to split at the seams and leaked oil, ruining a wood floor. The third one almost burned down my house. I left it turned off but plugged in. It caused a short circuit at the wall outlet. Sparks were shooting out of the wall. Fortunately I was in the room when it happened. I believe these were De Longhis.

I really liked these heaters at first, but they all gave out after a couple of years. I found many complaints online about the safety of these units. Info found online:

"Fires occur when the oil leaks or is accidentally spilled from the crack into the floor. This oil can not only ruin porous surfaces, it can also catch fire if it’s close to heating element, resulting in dangerous fire."

Re recall of Sunbeam heaters from the Consumer Product Safety Commission: "The firm has received approximately 40 reports of units that unexpectedly sprayed heated oil, resulting in reports of property damage involving damaged carpet and fabrics."

"Underwriters Laboratories (UL) found that oil heaters filled with unsuitable oil, such as oil with a low flash point, can present a risk of fire."

"King of Fans Inc. has received 81 reports of incidents involving leaking oil. Two minor burns were reported, along with two reports of falls in the oil."

Holmes recall: "A poor electrical connection within the heater can lead to overheating. This poses fire and thermal burn hazards."

Etc. Please be careful. I wouldn't sleep with these running at night.
An engineer friend has several De Longhis. He says the originals from Italy were quality-made; however, they've since been "outsourced".

BTW: I'd conflated two heating terms:
https://householdair.com/infrared-vs-radiant-heat/
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