Our apartment (one side of a duplex that is a modular construction with SUPERB insulation) has convection baseboard heat. Two of them do not work properly....get WAY too hot and pose a severe fire risk. Our electric bill last winter was not at all bad....but then again, we had a fairly mild winter. Still, the baseboard heat just doesn't make the house feel nice and toasty. 72 degrees still feels chilly because everything in the house is cold to the touch.
This year, I am thinking about buying 3 Duraflame quartz infrared heaters with fans. Each unit is rated at 5200 BTU and will heat a space of 1000 square feet. The units have 6 quartz infrared elements rated at 20,000 to 25,000 hours of life, copper heat exchangers and ultra quite fans that move the air at a speed of 6 meters per second. High efficiency filters clean the air before it enters the heat chamber. The external surfaces of the units stay cool to the touch and are pet and child safe.
The first floor of the apartment is pretty much open space. Living room and kitchen are mostly one room....there is a wall between the two rooms.....but the opening is 60 to 70% of that wall...maybe even more than that....more opening than wall space......there is a short hallway back to the down stairs half bath/laundry room. Total square footage of the first floor is around 520 to 540 square feet. There are ceiling fans in the living room and the kitchen to help circulate the heat throughout the space.
Upstairs....two 13 by 13 foot bedrooms, full bath and a small nookie area. Each of the bedrooms (one is our actual bedroom and the other is our office/computer/fish tank room) will get a heating unit of its own. Most likely smaller units....not the full size 5200 BTU/1000 square foot sized ones.
I know that these infrared quartz heaters are energy efficient and Duraflame invented them, perfected them, and build the best ones on the market....right here in the US of A and cover them with 3 year warranties. Prices on the full sized 5200 BUT units are not bad....found them online for $199 plus shipping (for a total of 229.48...cheaper than Walmart has them...plus this site has NO SALES TAX!).
Would this idea be feasible? Using three infrared quartz heaters to heat our not-even 1100 square foot home instead of the baseboard heaters? I have run this around in my head for the last several days and have not come up with any reason that this would not work, would not give us a warmer and more comfortable home and would not save on electric charges.
Anyone? Beuhler? Beuhler? Beuhler?
The unit in question:
http://www.northerntool.com/shop/tools/product_200485278_200485278
OBIO
This year, I am thinking about buying 3 Duraflame quartz infrared heaters with fans. Each unit is rated at 5200 BTU and will heat a space of 1000 square feet. The units have 6 quartz infrared elements rated at 20,000 to 25,000 hours of life, copper heat exchangers and ultra quite fans that move the air at a speed of 6 meters per second. High efficiency filters clean the air before it enters the heat chamber. The external surfaces of the units stay cool to the touch and are pet and child safe.
The first floor of the apartment is pretty much open space. Living room and kitchen are mostly one room....there is a wall between the two rooms.....but the opening is 60 to 70% of that wall...maybe even more than that....more opening than wall space......there is a short hallway back to the down stairs half bath/laundry room. Total square footage of the first floor is around 520 to 540 square feet. There are ceiling fans in the living room and the kitchen to help circulate the heat throughout the space.
Upstairs....two 13 by 13 foot bedrooms, full bath and a small nookie area. Each of the bedrooms (one is our actual bedroom and the other is our office/computer/fish tank room) will get a heating unit of its own. Most likely smaller units....not the full size 5200 BTU/1000 square foot sized ones.
I know that these infrared quartz heaters are energy efficient and Duraflame invented them, perfected them, and build the best ones on the market....right here in the US of A and cover them with 3 year warranties. Prices on the full sized 5200 BUT units are not bad....found them online for $199 plus shipping (for a total of 229.48...cheaper than Walmart has them...plus this site has NO SALES TAX!).
Would this idea be feasible? Using three infrared quartz heaters to heat our not-even 1100 square foot home instead of the baseboard heaters? I have run this around in my head for the last several days and have not come up with any reason that this would not work, would not give us a warmer and more comfortable home and would not save on electric charges.
Anyone? Beuhler? Beuhler? Beuhler?
The unit in question:
http://www.northerntool.com/shop/tools/product_200485278_200485278
OBIO