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Choosing a Space Heater

By Gary Foreman
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Date: 10/20/2004 Topics: Budget & Finance > Budget | Home Improvement > Heating | Old Categories > Budget  
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Last year when the price of natural gas went up, I was shocked at my heating bill. Almost one weeks paycheck a month was going to keeping my house at only 65 degrees. I decided a change had to be made. I sewed a heavy floor to ceiling curtain and hung it in the hallway separating the bottom floor of my house from the upstairs. That way I wasn't heating empty bedrooms and a second bathroom all day long. I turned my furnace thermostat down to it's lowest setting and bought a small electric heater to heat the bottom floor of my house during all but the time we were sleeping upstairs. My heating bill went down almost 35 percent! This year gas in my area is going up 12 percent and electric is actually going down.

I am thinking about not using gas heat at all and getting another electric heater for upstairs at night. I am confused about what kind of electric heater to get. Which is the most efficient? I've seen quartz, ceramic, coil, and oil filled but I don't know which one works best? No matter which one I get I will try and get one with good safety features.

- Mary

Mary has discovered one of the best ways to reduce your home heating bill. Only heat the rooms that are occupied. Especially when there's only one person at home and they're only using one or two rooms. And the simplest way to heat a room is to use a portable electric space heater. 

Space heaters convert almost all of the electric used into heat. In that, they're very efficient. Unfortunately, electricity is often made from gas, oil or coal. And only about 30% of the energy used goes into electricity.

So while you probably wouldn't want to use electric to heat your whole house in a cold climate, it's often the most cost efficient method for heating a smaller area. According the Central Maine Power Company the average cost of an electric heater is 13 cents per hour.

Mary is also wise to be concerned about safety. Space heaters can be dangerous. Even deadly. Especially if you have small children. Safety features are an important part of the purchase decision. Make sure that you read and follow the instructions.

Space heaters generally provide heat in one of two ways. Radiant heaters actually heat the objects at which they're aimed. They do not heat up the air in the room. The other type, convection heaters, warm the air around them.

Not heating the air is an advantage for radiant heaters. There's no drafts from moving air. And radiant heat is great for heating just portions of a room. You're only heating the areas where you want heat. Just point the radiant heater at the chair that you're sitting in!

Radiant heaters use a variety of heating elements. Many use quartz tubes. Quartz heaters generally cost less than $70 and are rated between 750 and 1500 watts.

Parabolic heaters use a ceramic core. They cost a little more than quartz and put out about the same amount of heat per watt used. Ceramic element heaters are safer than heaters with coils. They use a larger heating area so it doesn't need to be as hot.

Halogen or reflective heaters use an energy saving halogen bulb to produce heat which is reflected on nearby objects. The feeling is much like having the sun shine on you.

Convection heaters can heat a whole room more quickly than a radiant heater. That works well if there are a number of people in the room or they're moving about within the room. Some convection heaters also have fans to circulate the air in the room.

Convection heaters are inexpensive. You'll get one rated up to 5,000 Btu's for less than $50.

Like radiant heaters, convection heaters use a variety of heating elements. Ceramic disc heaters cost up to $150 and produce up to 5,000 Btu's per hour.

Oil and water filled units are the most efficient convection heaters. They utilize a heating element in a bath of oil or water. Like a water heater, the element cycles on and off. The water or oil stays warm in it's container and heats the surrounding air.

So which heater is best for Mary? Since she's considering a nighttime application people won't be moving around. So she's probably best choosing a radiant heater for each occupied bedroom. And, unless she has young children with inquisitive hands, the halogen or ceramic heater will provide more heat per kilowatt hour of electricity. Whatever Mary picks we hope that her utility bill won't be the hottest thing in her home this winter!

About The Author: Gary Foreman is the editor of http://TheDollarStretcher.com website. You'll find thousands of articles to help you stretcher you dollar and your day!

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By Anonymous (Guest Post)
Actually, 100% of the energy consumed by all heaters are turned into heat, including fan noise. That noise agitates the molecules in the room, impinges on the walls, and turns into heat. The only heat that doesn't stay in the room is the radiation that gets outside through the window, or fan noise that somehow seems to make it outside.

Posted on 11/13/2005 | Report Spam or Abuse

By DearWebby (Guest Post)
Let's clear up a myth first, that one type or another electric heater produces more heat per kilowatt used. That is pure baloney. ALL electricity used by a heater, except for fan noise, winds up as heat. The waste heat from the fan motor is heat too!

The factors to consider are
1) initial purchasing cost
2) whether air circulation is desirable or not.

Ideal is in-floor heating, with hot water pipes or hoses in the floor, regulated by thermostatically controlled zone valves (like the electric valves in your washing machine), and supplemented with solar water heating and heat storage. A lean-to greenhouse or wintergarden can produce a huge amount of recoverable heat. When the sun does shine, electricity usage is usually eliminated, plus extra heat can be stored easily in water tanks. At night and on really cloudy days the electric water heater may only have to top off the last few degrees.

Further savings can be realized if the incoming cold water is run up into the attic to recover and absorb lost heat, then through a lean-to greenhouse before going to the hot water heater. If you cut the difference between the incoming cold water and the hot tap water or floor heating water in half, you have cut the electricity bill in half.

If you can run the hoses or pipes, the payback for the materials is very fast.
Have FUN!
DearWebby
http://webby.com/humor

Posted on 05/06/2005 | Report Spam or Abuse

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