Re: Safety of space heaters?
When you first get the heater(of whatever variety, but I'd reccomend the oil filled as well, LOVE those things, very safe)... plug it in, and CHECK THE PLUG. We had two that the plugs overheated on.
I plugged mine into a dedicated thermostat too. That rocks. Keeps the room nicely warm, and the oil filled doesn't dry the air nearly as bad as the forced air heaters. I reccomend the oil filled to everyone for household use.
More hot air from an old dude
I feel that it is worth mentioning that I have encountered many people utilizing space heaters other than electric which is all that has been mentioned so far. I have seen kerosene, propane, natural gas and oil space heaters in more common use in Michigan than electric space heaters although not by reptile hobbyists. A kerosene heater (or white gas) is downright unsafe to operate indoors. An older natural gas or propane heater should be vented outside as should an oil heater. Newer non vented natural gas and propane heaters are sold today that are claimed by the manufacturers to be safe for use indoors. With any source of heat that is burning a fuel good ventilation ls a concern. With an electric space heater it would be prudent to put a quality thermostat of your choice in line as it will be more reliable than the one built in to the unit.
Re: More hot air from an old dude
Quick note :
Oil filled heaters are not oil-BURNING heaters. Just in case anyone reading this quickly didn't realize the difference. The oil-filled heaters are electric heaters that look like radiators, and electrically heat a resevoir of oil, it does not burn oil.
Oil-burning heaters are not very safe, especially for inside use(IMHO).
Re: Safety of space heaters?
Okay I have another question... The place I went to didn't have any oil filled heaters. They did have a Delonghi safeheat though which looked good, so I got it. However it's a ceramic heater, so I'm not sure if it's okay? Would an oil filled be safer? If the only problem with a ceramic is that it dries out the air, that isn't a problem. The store has an awesome return policy so I could take it back if it's not as good.
I got this one: http://shopping.aol.com/electric-cer...590er/26374715
Also, it says keep it 3 feet away from things like curtains, furniture, clothes, etc, but can I put it next to a bare wall?
Re: Safety of space heaters?
You can have the intake reasonably close to a bare wall, say a couple inches away. This way it can still pull in fresh air, but don't but it right up against the wall.
DeLonghi's have an excellent track record for safety. Also, I would recommend putting it on a dedicated thermostat, I have mine hooked up to a Ranco. Then I set the built in thermostat on the heating device just a couple degrees above the Ranco setting. So if the Ranco get's zapped to ON, the built in thermostat of the device will act as a safety backup, so my room doesn't go to 100 degrees or however hot the heating device would take it.
That's my method,
JonV
Re: Safety of space heaters?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tikall
I keep my snakes in my room which is probably the warmest room in the house. The ambient room temperatures were great for the cool side during the summer, but now that it's cooling down it isn't working (cool side is getting down to 77).
I've looked into buying a space heater to keep the room temps up to 80-82. When I suggested this to my mother, she was horrified. She said they're incredibly dangerous, and I'd burn the house down. Are they really this dangerous? What safety precautions should I take? Also, are there any specific heaters you'd recommend?
Thank you for any information!
I'm not too sure about space heaters but I've been using an oil filled radiator style heater hooked up to a 1500watt Johnson and Johnson t-stat for several years running 24/7 365 with no issues.
:salute: