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-   -   Is there a towel warmer that works? (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/222575-there-towel-warmer-works.html)

Aaron Fude November 26th 07 05:34 AM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
Hi,

I own this a Warmrails towel warmer:

http://warmrails.com/pg/products/hwTowel.htm

and it's a joke! I occasionally get a warm spot on a towel, but that's
about it. (Perhaps mine is broken?)

Is there a model that works or is the whole concept flawed?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude

PaPaPeng November 26th 07 07:31 AM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
On Sun, 25 Nov 2007 21:34:44 -0800 (PST), Aaron Fude
wrote:

Hi,

I own this a Warmrails towel warmer:

http://warmrails.com/pg/products/hwTowel.htm

and it's a joke! I occasionally get a warm spot on a towel, but that's
about it. (Perhaps mine is broken?)

Is there a model that works or is the whole concept flawed?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude



Look up Alibaba, the China products source.

http://www.alibaba.com/trade/search?...uct_en&CatId=0

There is no central heating in China yet so they use the hot water
heater and run them through tube rack radiators similar to the ones in
the URL. There are many variations including a towel rack. I don't
know they are plumbed but I think you run the hot water through it
before the water reaches the shower head. Or maybe it has its own
circuit with a return to the hot water heater for reheating. There is
a large variety of hot water heater tube products if you do a further
search in alibaba.

They have small apartments and the electrical hot water heater is
ceiling mounted.
http://gemake.en.alibaba.com/offerde...er_Heater.html

JoeSpareBedroom November 26th 07 01:40 PM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
"Aaron Fude" wrote in message
...
Hi,

I own this a Warmrails towel warmer:

http://warmrails.com/pg/products/hwTowel.htm

and it's a joke! I occasionally get a warm spot on a towel, but that's
about it. (Perhaps mine is broken?)

Is there a model that works or is the whole concept flawed?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude



The web page says " Professional installation, all hardware and instructions
included ". Did it really come with professional installation?

I stayed in a London hotel where each bathroom had a warming rack "powered"
by the hot water from the shower. This was many years ago, so I don't
remember just how warm the towels got, but in retrospect, it seems you'd
have to take a pretty long shower in order to have much of an effect on the
towels. I suppose if you had the money to do the plumbing, *AND* use pipes
nice enough to be exposed, it would be worth doing just for kicks.



professorpaul November 26th 07 01:54 PM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
Try this one for size. My neighbor works for Dacor, the upper end
appliance outfit, so has access to all sorts of goodies. He installed
a kitchen warming oven in the bathroom to heat the towels!

[email protected] November 26th 07 03:35 PM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
On Sun, 25 Nov 2007 21:34:44 -0800 (PST), Aaron Fude
wrote:

Hi,

I own this a Warmrails towel warmer:

http://warmrails.com/pg/products/hwTowel.htm

and it's a joke! I occasionally get a warm spot on a towel, but that's
about it. (Perhaps mine is broken?)

Is there a model that works or is the whole concept flawed?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude


Check out Runtal. There is a major difference between towel warmers
that run at about 100W and towel warmers that run at around 1000W
(electric ones). I would beleive that a 100W warmer would not be very
effective but the 1000W ones would be and also contribute to room
heat. Runtal also makes water heated towel warmers.

Steve Barker[_3_] November 26th 07 03:57 PM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
these work great as towel warmers. and probably cheaper than the yuppified
"towel" warmers.

http://www.lowes.com/lowes/lkn?actio...07L&lpage=none

s


"Aaron Fude" wrote in message
...
Hi,

I own this a Warmrails towel warmer:

http://warmrails.com/pg/products/hwTowel.htm

and it's a joke! I occasionally get a warm spot on a towel, but that's
about it. (Perhaps mine is broken?)

Is there a model that works or is the whole concept flawed?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude




[email protected] November 26th 07 04:00 PM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
Towel warmers are a frivilous waster of money and energy. I would
think that you would have more important things to worry about.

Steve Barker[_3_] November 26th 07 04:18 PM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
so are cars that get less than 30mpg, but what do you drive?

s

wrote in message
...
Towel warmers are a frivilous waster of money and energy. I would
think that you would have more important things to worry about.




CJT November 26th 07 11:38 PM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
professorpaul wrote:
Try this one for size. My neighbor works for Dacor, the upper end
appliance outfit, so has access to all sorts of goodies. He installed
a kitchen warming oven in the bathroom to heat the towels!


I wonder whether a quick spritz and 90 seconds in the microwave would
heat 'em up.

--
The e-mail address in our reply-to line is reversed in an attempt to
minimize spam. Our true address is of the form .

aemeijers November 26th 07 11:47 PM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
wrote:
On Sun, 25 Nov 2007 21:34:44 -0800 (PST), Aaron Fude
wrote:

Hi,

I own this a Warmrails towel warmer:

http://warmrails.com/pg/products/hwTowel.htm

and it's a joke! I occasionally get a warm spot on a towel, but that's
about it. (Perhaps mine is broken?)

Is there a model that works or is the whole concept flawed?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude


My wife bought one similar to that. All it really does is dry the
towels a little faster when you hand a wet one up there. She weaves
her towel through the heated bars to get it a bit warmer but I think
it is a waste of money


Ya Think? Just another profit center for builders and designers to sell
to silly rich ladies, and giggle all the way to the bank, IMHO.

Whatever happened to just mounting the towel rack over the forced-air
heat outlet, or over the radiator?

aem sends...

JoeSpareBedroom November 26th 07 11:52 PM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
"aemeijers" wrote in message
...
wrote:
On Sun, 25 Nov 2007 21:34:44 -0800 (PST), Aaron Fude
wrote:

Hi,

I own this a Warmrails towel warmer:

http://warmrails.com/pg/products/hwTowel.htm

and it's a joke! I occasionally get a warm spot on a towel, but that's
about it. (Perhaps mine is broken?)

Is there a model that works or is the whole concept flawed?

Thanks!

Aaron Fude


My wife bought one similar to that. All it really does is dry the
towels a little faster when you hand a wet one up there. She weaves
her towel through the heated bars to get it a bit warmer but I think
it is a waste of money


Ya Think? Just another profit center for builders and designers to sell to
silly rich ladies, and giggle all the way to the bank, IMHO.

Whatever happened to just mounting the towel rack over the forced-air heat
outlet, or over the radiator?

aem sends...


Whatever happened to being momentarily chilly after a shower, which leads to
a lady's nipples standing up straight? Seriously. Warm towels are
counterproductive.



terry November 27th 07 12:24 AM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
On Nov 26, 12:35 pm, wrote:
On Sun, 25 Nov 2007 21:34:44 -0800 (PST), Aaron Fude

wrote:
Hi,


I own this a Warmrails towel warmer:


http://warmrails.com/pg/products/hwTowel.htm


and it's a joke! I occasionally get a warm spot on a towel, but that's
about it. (Perhaps mine is broken?)


Is there a model that works or is the whole concept flawed?


Thanks!


Aaron Fude


Check out Runtal. There is a major difference between towel warmers
that run at about 100W and towel warmers that run at around 1000W
(electric ones). I would beleive that a 100W warmer would not be very
effective but the 1000W ones would be and also contribute to room
heat. Runtal also makes water heated towel warmers.


I bet it would. The electric baseboard heater in our bathroom is only
500 watts; and this is a cool climate. However with 240 watts of
incandescent light bulbs in fixture over the vanity the heater rarely
cuts in anyway!
Heated towel rails! Complicated and seem like a complete non-
necessity!
We keep a hand towel permanently on rail over the heater; most
convenient place for it in smallish bathroom. Bath towels either used
once or pitched over the shower rail for same person to use a second
time.
Keep everything as simple as possible; works best and is easy on
maintenance.
Also avoid mixing valve/taps for same reason of simplicity. In
previous dwellings did not have good experience with them, kitchen or
bathroom! Got rid of the one in this kitchen many years ago.
Our two original individual bath shower taps have, with occasional
minor repairs such as new washers and replacement chrome handles for
cosmetic repair a couple of times over some 38 years have worked fine.

aemeijers November 27th 07 04:14 AM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
wrote:
On Mon, 26 Nov 2007 23:47:38 GMT, aemeijers wrote:

Whatever happened to just mounting the towel rack over the forced-air
heat outlet, or over the radiator?


Below the 27th parallel we don't have radiators or forced air heat.
The towel warmer's main function is to dry the towel.

Fine- hang it over the shower curtain rod, and leave the jalousies and
the bathroom door open. The ocean breezes will dry it.

That far south, shouldn't you have an outdoor shower, anyway?

:^) , of course.....

aem sends...

Patrick[_4_] November 27th 07 03:18 PM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
Bought a Runtal electric model (direct wire, with programmable
console) fairly expensive (-around $800) But is the best gadget I ever
got. If it went out I would order a new one immediately. (7 yrs old
now) An unwarmed towel feels cold and like it is already wet. I tried
a couple of the freestanding models which were crap.It is well worth
it, in my opinion.

Not@home November 27th 07 06:25 PM

Is there a towel warmer that works?
 
I have a Runtal, too, and it heats the entire small bathroom in addition
to warming towels, so we shut off the forced air vent in that room.

They also have models that hook into hot water heating systems, which I
think the OP said they have.

I first came across these at a ski resort in Switzerland where they not
only heated your room, but dried and warmed your clothes. They are not
cheap, but if you want quality you have to pay the price.

Patrick wrote:
Bought a Runtal electric model (direct wire, with programmable
console) fairly expensive (-around $800) But is the best gadget I ever
got. If it went out I would order a new one immediately. (7 yrs old
now) An unwarmed towel feels cold and like it is already wet. I tried
a couple of the freestanding models which were crap.It is well worth
it, in my opinion.



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