Curly2001
Dec 19, 2020Explorer II
Electric space heaters
Just curious if anyone has a good safe electric heater to use to heat a 30' fifth wheel overnight? Would like to supplement the propane furnace on colder nights.
Thanks,
Curly
Thanks,
Curly
pianotuna wrote:
The safest may be the oil filled units. Their surface temperature is lower.
pianotuna wrote:
My favorite heat source is electric heated carpets.
Curly2001 wrote:Not even close. From my research, blankets are under 200w.
It even makes me think that electric blankets could cause the same problems with their current draw.
rhagfo wrote:wa8yxm wrote:
The problem is not the heater. most of them are safe now days (I like to avoid the ones that glow red however) Ceramics tend to be very compact. Oil filled very large. But all of them give exactly the same amount of heat for the same amount of electricity. all heaters are 100% efficient so if the maker says something like "3 times more efficient" they are lying. (The reason is in an electrical system all losses express as heat, with a heater this is the desired output so all losses are recovered).
Page 2: The Danger
Quick box or Unibox outlets use punch down connectors that are great at say 100mA or less (telephone current) but not so good when the amps hit double digits.
A 1500 watt heater is 12.5 amps I had one outlet overheat I've seen them melted down and wires broken and acing. Serious fire hazard AND I AM NOT AN RV SERVICE TECHINICIAN just what I've seen
I used assorted electric heaters. mostly hot (but not red) wire, some ceramic. for 15 years. But I also installed special circuits (3 of them) two were dedicatred circuit breaker via 12ga wire to a 15/20 amp duplex outlet (has a "T" shaped neutral slot) the third was 12-ga from a dedicated breaker to a GFCI (Kitchen 2) with a 2nd standard Duplex "Daisy" off the GFCI (Also GFCI protected)
Never smelled hot wire after that.
This the biggest issue with using portable heaters in an RV! The outlets don’t have screw down terminals, the insulated wire is pressed into a blade of metal that pierces the insulation and makes contact with the wire inside, it has a small contact area. That small contact area and high draw create heat in the outlet it self.
We full time so heating is an everyday process for us in winter, my father was a firefighter and saw many fires started by portable heaters, with some deaths.
Pianotuna has installed heated carpet, which keeps feet warm, the thought is interesting to me.
We chose to heat with the RV comfort systems electric furnace add-on system, this adds an electric heating element to the furnace air path, so not only heating the interior of our 5er we heat the basement. We have a temperature sensor in the basement and at just below freezing outside it reads between 51 and 49 degrees at the outside wall.