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Default Heating a bathroom.

Hi,

I gut-renovating a bathroom connected to the master bedroom (so it's
already getting a little bit of heat). It is very small (7x8) and has a
radiator which is in a bad place. Rather than move it, I'm looking for
an alternative.

I'm evaluating two:
1. A towel-warmer looking heater. Incredibly expensive ($1500+) and
expensive electrical work.

2. Radiant heating. A good idea?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude

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Default Heating a bathroom.


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oups.com...
Hi,

I gut-renovating a bathroom connected to the master bedroom (so it's
already getting a little bit of heat). It is very small (7x8) and has a
radiator which is in a bad place. Rather than move it, I'm looking for
an alternative.

I'm evaluating two:
1. A towel-warmer looking heater. Incredibly expensive ($1500+) and
expensive electrical work.

2. Radiant heating. A good idea?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude


You're gojng to have to compromise somehwere. Price-effecinecy or utility.

The optimal solution would consider the size of the floor, the floor size to
room volume ratio and your climate.

If you mean radiant floor heating, you need most of the room to have a
floor. If like my bath, the floor is small and most af the area is taken by
the shower and tub and vanity then in my case floor heating would be
insufficient. I think you can get these systems with electric elements but
you would also need a dedicated high current circuit.

If you consider Radinat IR lamp (quartz, not one of those red 150W
floodlights). I find these to heat unevenly and can be uncomfortably hot if
you go too close. That plus the red lighting it imparts would make it hard
for the ladies to put on makeup. On the more creative side, how about a
Quartz IR lamp shining onto a sheet of metal which warms up and reradiates
the heat. This can be arranged in kind of a chandelier arrangement and the
metal could be corrigated to increase surface area. The red light would
reflect back up the the cieling creating a more pleasing glow and less
intense direct heating effect. Many of these lamps are sold for outdoor
heating purposes.

If you live in a mild climate like CA then maybe you don't need that much
heat and a portable 750/1500W space heater plugged into a GFCI and placed on
the floor plus whatever heat leaks in from the MBR will be enough. If you
have a large bath with tile and an outside wall and live in a cold climate,
you will definately want more.

An in wall elecctric space heater is probably cheaper than that towel warmer
but the electric supply will be dedicated for any perminant mounted heating
appliance and thus be as much work. A 1500W plug in heater can run on any
20A circuit and does not need to be dedicated as long as the plug is not
hardwired. Wire has gotten very expensive very fast. Expect any quote for
new circuits to be at least $100-$300 higher than last year.

You can get heaters built into cieling ventilating fans too. Usually 1500W
max though. Might be your simplist drop in solution though.


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