โSep-16-2016 03:40 AM
โSep-26-2016 11:57 AM
โSep-26-2016 09:40 AM
pasusan wrote:rjsurfer wrote:Weez agrees - this is what we have - it is the type that keeps the fan going even when no heat is needed so there is no on and off noise to wake us up at night. The cabinet stays cool to the touch which was important for us as we have 2 cats. And it has the tip over protection - what more could you ask for?samandtheduck wrote:
I've had a Vornado since 2005 and it has been the best heater for keeping our 33' heated. I have owned a few cheaper heaters we have used as a second heater when the weather got close to freezing but none of them worked very well. I finally bought a second Vornado and threw all the cheap ones away. The Vornados circulate the air even when the heat is off and if you set the temp. at 70 degrees it stays within a degree of 70 degrees.
By far my best investment in keeping my camper warm.
Vornado moves a lot of air, which is just as important as making heat.
Let's face it ALL 1,500 watt heaters produce the same amount of heat, so moving the air and keeping it at an exact temperature and doing so quietly are the only differences. Vornado excellent in all three.
Ron W
โSep-26-2016 08:22 AM
rjsurfer wrote:Weez agrees - this is what we have - it is the type that keeps the fan going even when no heat is needed so there is no on and off noise to wake us up at night. The cabinet stays cool to the touch which was important for us as we have 2 cats. And it has the tip over protection - what more could you ask for?samandtheduck wrote:
I've had a Vornado since 2005 and it has been the best heater for keeping our 33' heated. I have owned a few cheaper heaters we have used as a second heater when the weather got close to freezing but none of them worked very well. I finally bought a second Vornado and threw all the cheap ones away. The Vornados circulate the air even when the heat is off and if you set the temp. at 70 degrees it stays within a degree of 70 degrees.
By far my best investment in keeping my camper warm.
Vornado moves a lot of air, which is just as important as making heat.
Let's face it ALL 1,500 watt heaters produce the same amount of heat, so moving the air and keeping it at an exact temperature and doing so quietly are the only differences. Vornado excellent in all three.
Ron W
โSep-26-2016 08:02 AM
RoyB wrote:
I like to use the oil filled radiator looking 1500 watt heaters here... They do not have the open flame or red hot flame core or make any noise except CLICK every now and then...
I use the low profile model which is perfect to sit one of those O2-COOL fans behind it if you want to move the air around some.
We also like to run a separate extension cord into our trailer forom the campground 20A Pedestal service to run our our portable 1500 Watt heater. This does not take away from the the 30A Pedestal service we are using...
Roy Ken
โSep-26-2016 07:46 AM
โSep-25-2016 10:05 PM
โSep-25-2016 06:24 PM
โSep-25-2016 02:17 AM
samandtheduck wrote:
I've had a Vornado since 2005 and it has been the best heater for keeping our 33' heated. I have owned a few cheaper heaters we have used as a second heater when the weather got close to freezing but none of them worked very well. I finally bought a second Vornado and threw all the cheap ones away. The Vornados circulate the air even when the heat is off and if you set the temp. at 70 degrees it stays within a degree of 70 degrees.
โSep-24-2016 03:35 PM
โSep-23-2016 02:06 PM
โSep-23-2016 12:27 PM
โSep-23-2016 11:53 AM
โSep-23-2016 11:24 AM
travelnutz wrote:
myredracer,
The total voltage drop in the 6' long 16 gauge power cord (13 amp load rating) stranded copper wire with 1500 watts (12.5 amps) at 120 volts of AC going to the electric heater is only 6/10 of 1 volt. Meaning the heater is getting 119.4 volts of the 120 volts at the outlet. Negligible loss and means the 1500 watts would only drop to 1492.5 watts delivered to the heater's element due to voltage drop! The 16 gauge heater wire is not the issue at all for not getting a 1500 watts reading as claimed of the watts being consumed.
Further, even assuming there's 120 volts actually measured at the RV's entry circuit breaker box from shore power and then having a run of 25' of 14 gauge copper wire to the outlet the heater is plugged into, there still would only be a 1.6 volt drop at the outlet the actual heater wire is plugged into and with the heater turned on high selection. The 120 volts at the breaker would still measure 118.4 volts being delivered to the heater 16 gauge power cord. Check the voltage drop charts for yourself.
These 2 things are not the reason for the electric heater actually only drawing a measured 1300 or 1400 watts rather than the 1500 watts claimed by the manufacturer. Therefore, such heater will not deliver 5120 BTU's nor will it measure to be drawing 12.5 amps either.
Conversely, I can assure you that every 100 watt incandescent light bulb I've ever checked actually draws 100 watts just like is printed on the bulb but never had a claimed 1500 watt electric heater actually draw even as much as 1400 watts or even close to 12 amps of 120 volt AC.
โSep-17-2016 03:44 AM