Electric heating
Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article ,
Rod writes:
Thanks for the effort you (and others) put in to getting these articles
together.
I feel there is some confusion in the term plug-in. I have seen quite a
few built-in electric fires (fan and bar) which in every other way are
equivalent to the plug-in models.
Back in the 60s we had a bar fire which had its heating wires within
quartz tubes. Not, I think, covered. (Are they still available? Or is
this just an historic footnote.)
I've seen what was then a quite common ceiling heat/light combo
advertised quite recently, and mentioned here. Dimplex did a very
common 750W wall mounted version too, which I haven't noticed
recently.
They are silica glass tubes, and for the purposes of PAT testing,
the silica glass is considered to be a live part (which means most
of the 60's ones won't have good enough finger guards nowadays to
stop you touching the tube).
A very good idea simply because they get so hot!
Which made me think, I'd quite like electric fires to switch off
entirely of the power fails. I can imagine a situation in which a fire
is just left but something is put on/near/dropped onto such a fire
during a failure - and forgotten/missed in the dark that often
accompanies power cuts. Even just the waste of power that could occur
might be a reason!
--
Rod
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