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-   -   Bath Exhaust/Light/Heat combo unit (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/179026-bath-exhaust-light-heat-combo-unit.html)

[email protected] October 12th 06 07:58 PM

Bath Exhaust/Light/Heat combo unit
 
I'm working on a bathroom update. 1950s vintage, 70ish square foot,
southeast MI. I have an existing exhaust fan/light that needs
attention as birds invaded the attic and built a nest in the plastic
exhaust pipe. Since I have to crawl up there any way I'm going to
replace it with rigid metal. I figure I might as well replace the fan
itself since it is probably 25+ years old. The light has a 7 watt bulb
since I only need it for a night light.

I was looking at units such as this:
http://www.lowes.com/lowes/lkn?actio...732&lpage=none

with the addition of a heater. I have the heat drop back to about 63
in the winter at night, so it would be nice to warm up the bathroom
quickly for late night trips or early in the morning if the central
heat has not caught up in time for a shower.

I would have to do some additional wiring with the heated version, but
it would not be too difficult as I have an unused attic fan that
already has a dedicated 20 amp circuit I can steal.

Are these units actually worth the extra cost and installation headache?


z October 12th 06 09:07 PM

Bath Exhaust/Light/Heat combo unit
 

wrote:
I'm working on a bathroom update. 1950s vintage, 70ish square foot,
southeast MI. I have an existing exhaust fan/light that needs
attention as birds invaded the attic and built a nest in the plastic
exhaust pipe. Since I have to crawl up there any way I'm going to
replace it with rigid metal. I figure I might as well replace the fan
itself since it is probably 25+ years old. The light has a 7 watt bulb
since I only need it for a night light.

I was looking at units such as this:
http://www.lowes.com/lowes/lkn?actio...732&lpage=none

with the addition of a heater. I have the heat drop back to about 63
in the winter at night, so it would be nice to warm up the bathroom
quickly for late night trips or early in the morning if the central
heat has not caught up in time for a shower.

I would have to do some additional wiring with the heated version, but
it would not be too difficult as I have an unused attic fan that
already has a dedicated 20 amp circuit I can steal.

Are these units actually worth the extra cost and installation headache?


Does it really need a 20 amp? that's a lotta wattas.
An alternative is some with the IR heatlamp, they don't use much watts.


Edwin Pawlowski October 12th 06 09:35 PM

Bath Exhaust/Light/Heat combo unit
 

"z" wrote in message
Does it really need a 20 amp? that's a lotta wattas.
An alternative is some with the IR heatlamp, they don't use much watts.


Certainly does
a.. Suitable for insulated ceilings (Type I.C.)
a.. White three switch, four-function wall-mounted control and white wall
plate included; fits single-gang opening
a.. UL, HVI Certified
a.. 120 v, 15.5 amps



John Grabowski October 12th 06 10:37 PM

Bath Exhaust/Light/Heat combo unit
 

wrote in message
oups.com...
I'm working on a bathroom update. 1950s vintage, 70ish square foot,
southeast MI. I have an existing exhaust fan/light that needs
attention as birds invaded the attic and built a nest in the plastic
exhaust pipe. Since I have to crawl up there any way I'm going to
replace it with rigid metal. I figure I might as well replace the fan
itself since it is probably 25+ years old. The light has a 7 watt bulb
since I only need it for a night light.

I was looking at units such as this:

http://www.lowes.com/lowes/lkn?actio...732&lpage=none

with the addition of a heater. I have the heat drop back to about 63
in the winter at night, so it would be nice to warm up the bathroom
quickly for late night trips or early in the morning if the central
heat has not caught up in time for a shower.

I would have to do some additional wiring with the heated version, but
it would not be too difficult as I have an unused attic fan that
already has a dedicated 20 amp circuit I can steal.

Are these units actually worth the extra cost and installation headache?


Although these combo models do produce a lot of heat, your bathroom will not
feel warm as soon as you turn it on. It will take some time to warm up the
space as the fan usually blows the hot air out gently and it is on the
ceiling where the heat rises to anyway.

The infrared bulbs that someone else suggested will give you an instant
feeling of warmth, but will not heat the space quickly. My suggestion for a
nice cozy warm feeling is to install a heat lamp unit AND an underfloor mat
heater. Using both of these at the same time will consume less watts than
the combo fan/heater/nightlight unit.

Most of the complaints I hear about bath exhaust fans are concerning the
noise. I suggest one of the Panasonic models to replace your existing fan.


J.A. Michel October 13th 06 02:45 AM

Bath Exhaust/Light/Heat combo unit
 

Are these units actually worth the extra cost and installation headache?


YES THEY ARE!! We recently moved to a new home. Although our new home is
superior to the old one in every aspect, we do miss one thing. Our old home
had a heater just like that in the bathroom, and our new home does not. We
sure miss the 'ol hot air blower on cold mornings! It was really nice. We
are considering installing one at the new house.




RickR October 14th 06 06:49 AM

Bath Exhaust/Light/Heat combo unit
 
Depending on your bath layout you might try a "toe-kick" heater. 20A
forced air will heat a small room quickly, and is at your level. It
mounts in the base of a cabinet and blows hot air on your toes. :-))

Had one in a previous house and wish I could mount one here.

RickR

J.A. Michel wrote:
Are these units actually worth the extra cost and installation headache?


YES THEY ARE!! We recently moved to a new home. Although our new home is
superior to the old one in every aspect, we do miss one thing. Our old home
had a heater just like that in the bathroom, and our new home does not. We
sure miss the 'ol hot air blower on cold mornings! It was really nice. We
are considering installing one at the new house.




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