Currently good stock for C&C and also time of posting aval for delivery
Product Information
Guarantee - 2 years
Safety feature - Over heat safety cut out
Features and Benefits
Portable ceramic heater with carry handle
Adjustable thermostat control
2 heating settings with overheat protection
Sturdy steel design
220-240V single phase
12 comments
weallneedhelp
8 Jul 17#12
Back up at £39 on the web..
marty-401
7 Jul 17#11
I remember seeing these in store last winter and they were £18.99 back then....where do they get their original prices from?
pibpob
7 Jul 17#10
Very clever :wink: but what's being said is what always needs to be said on these threads - you don't get something for nothing with electric heaters unless they're storage heaters and you're on Economy 7. There's a widespread myth that oil-filled radiators provide miracle heat you don't pay for, but they don't. The 400% COP of air conditioners in heating mode (and I have one) is under ideal conditions. Under realistic conditions this is impaired by things like the evaporators icing up.
bbdom
7 Jul 17#9
Actually many air conditioning units can be used as heating units with some of them proving over four times the input power as output heat. So you get >400% of the energy consumed back as heat. The bonus is you can use them to keep cool in the summer :wink:
AdsK
7 Jul 17#8
thanks. ordered for collection in Sutton.
shootomanUK
7 Jul 17#7
Its £20 delivered... Not £15 delivered !
prudenza
7 Jul 17#6
Thanks guys.
I have an oil filled radiator and agree, works well and as you say, releases heat when off and not drawing much power and has a thermostat so pretty good.
Dodge62
7 Jul 172#5
No such thing as an "energy efficient heater". 100% of the energy consumed by any heater is converted into heat. Some might turn into light or sound, but that's converted to heat as soon as it hits anything anyway. The only differences is in the way they heat a room - some might heat the air more, some might heat things directly in front of them more than things behind. An oil-filled radiator takes a little time heating itself up before heating the room, but that's countered when it releases heat slowly after being turned off.
bayhabourbutcher
7 Jul 173#4
AFAIAA all types of electric heaters produce the same amount of heat per KW of electricity so no difference in efficiency - just look out for something with both a thermostat & timer
personally I prefer oil filled radiators as they are silent & you can use them to dry clothes (that can cope with the radiators hotness)
Opening post
Product Information
12 comments
I have an oil filled radiator and agree, works well and as you say, releases heat when off and not drawing much power and has a thermostat so pretty good.
personally I prefer oil filled radiators as they are silent & you can use them to dry clothes (that can cope with the radiators hotness)
some links :
http://www.homebase.co.uk/en/homebaseuk/2kw-convector-heater-with-timer-380820
(very cheap for a convertor heater)
http://www.homebase.co.uk/en/homebaseuk/homebase-mini-oil-radiator---450w-210025
(only big enough for box rooms & caravans)
http://www.homebase.co.uk/en/homebaseuk/homebase-oil-radiator---1kw-304727
Thanks.