โDec-28-2015 04:21 PM
โJan-05-2016 02:24 PM
โJan-05-2016 02:18 PM
โJan-05-2016 02:07 PM
jaycocreek wrote:Marketing double speak.. AND a PACK OF LIES..
Really,Just what is your "first hand" experience with a modern infared box heater in an RV?
I have used just about every heater made in my RV including Catalytic/Kerosene/Ceramic/Infared/oil etc etc and still have quite a collection of them.The infared box heater does by far the best job of all of them except maybe the Catalytic, in keeping my 30ft trailer and 21ft Motorhome warm in Idaho's winter climate.
Just to show I use it in an RV,here is a picture of it in the RV.
And in the house which it does an excellent job at,much more than any other portable heater I have used..I currently have a milk house heater/a tower heater/ceramic and the good old regular electric heater with setting from 400 watts to 1500 watts.I just sold a oil heater.
The airflow from this heater far exceeds any other I have tried and probably why it heats large area's much better.
โJan-05-2016 12:23 PM
โJan-05-2016 12:07 PM
mbopp wrote:
A 1500 watt heater outputs 5100 BTU. Your furnace should be a minimum of 20,000 BTU and probably more. So the furnace should output 4X as much as the space heater at a minimum.
I've run two electric heaters, a 1500 watt and a 1000 watt and not tripped the 30A breaker.
โJan-05-2016 11:29 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:
Yikes, that is one heck of a lot of electric!
Roughly 23,870 BTUs..
Hope you are not paying for that heat.
โJan-05-2016 10:44 AM
โJan-05-2016 07:51 AM
goducks10 wrote:
Saw a post on another forum about these heaters. They seem pretty efficient and no need to worry about poor wiring or small elec cords.
The nice thing is they run on low pressure LP so you can tap your RV line and run off the RV tanks.
http://www.campingworld.com/shopping/item/olympian-wave-3-catalytic-safety-heater/19332
โJan-05-2016 06:52 AM
โJan-05-2016 02:49 AM
Marketing double speak.. AND a PACK OF LIES..
โJan-05-2016 12:15 AM
Gdetrailer wrote:You do know that many if not most S&B houses are wired in a similar fashion. I have seen quite a few that forgo using the screw teminalal that are present and unstead use the quicker push in wire attachment... Not disputing which one may be better... Just stating a fact. I do think that the screws make for better contact when new,,, But the downside in a mobile application may be the a tendancy to loosen over timepianotuna wrote:
Hi Gde,
Thanks for the great photos of the vampire connectors.
My peak demand in truly cold weather is 7000 watts.
:E
Yikes, that is one heck of a lot of electric!
Roughly 23,870 BTUs..
Hope you are not paying for that heat..
Folks who argue "for" those vampire taps NEEDED to really see how poor of a connection they are..
They are not used for "quality", instead they are used by the RV industry to SPEED UP THE BUILD.. Time is money so if they can have a worker make more connections per hr using vampire taps the manufacturer SAVES money in LABOR costs AND can pump out more units per worker..
โJan-04-2016 05:41 PM
pianotuna wrote:
Hi Gde,
Thanks for the great photos of the vampire connectors.
My peak demand in truly cold weather is 7000 watts.
โJan-04-2016 05:12 PM
โJan-04-2016 03:30 PM
โJan-04-2016 03:20 PM