Oil filled portable radiators
The little ones on wheels you can get from argos etc
Are they any good ?
With the energy bills as they are was thinking of grabbing a couple instead of firing up the central heating
Cheaper to run ?
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
SLUDGE FACTORY
The little ones on wheels you can get from argos etc
Are they any good ?
With the energy bills as they are was thinking of grabbing a couple instead of firing up the central heating
Cheaper to run ?
I’ve got one which I use in the room which doesn’t have a radiator. It’s a small room, so it’s good for that, but I wouldn’t use it instead of a radiator in one of the bigger rooms in the house. When I first moved in up here, there was no working boiler so I used the oil radiator a lot for a few weeks - it was in the spring, so it wasn’t too bad, but looking at my electric bill for that time, it was quite expensive,
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
I’ve got one of these , which appear fairly economical , that said I find more useful in the summer as it offers cool airflow and I know you have complained of heat in the past.
https://www.dyson.co.uk/fans-and-hea...l/white-nickel
According to Ben Gallizzi, energy expert at Uswitch, it'll cost you 19.8p to keep it running for 12 hours straight. If you had it on for 24 hours a day during a week-long heatwave it would set you back £2.77.
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
the other bob wilson
I’ve got one which I use in the room which doesn’t have a radiator. It’s a small room, so it’s good for that, but I wouldn’t use it instead of a radiator in one of the bigger rooms in the house. When I first moved in up here, there was no working boiler so I used the oil radiator a lot for a few weeks - it was in the spring, so it wasn’t too bad, but looking at my electric bill for that time, it was quite expensive,
I can't be blasting the heat through the main system
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
TWGL1
I’ve got one of these , which appear fairly economical , that said I find more useful in the summer as it offers cool airflow and I know you have complained of heat in the past.
https://www.dyson.co.uk/fans-and-hea...l/white-nickel
According to Ben Gallizzi, energy expert at Uswitch, it'll cost you 19.8p to keep it running for 12 hours straight. If you had it on for 24 hours a day during a week-long heatwave it would set you back £2.77.
That's the thing these oil filled rads are pushed but the cost is no advantage is the elec price is so high
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
I am going to argos in Bridgend
And I am going now
Onwards
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
SLUDGE FACTORY
That's the thing these oil filled rads are pushed but the cost is no advantage is the elec price is so high
20p for 12 hours doesn't sound expensive (if true).
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
I’ve got one for my little office in the house and it does just enough to keep me warm. As I’ve got a 3 story house if I put the heating on it warms two floors when all I need is a bit of warmth in the smallest office room. It’s decent enough.
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
SLUDGE FACTORY
That's the thing these oil filled rads are pushed but the cost is no advantage is the elec price is so high
Hence the wheels.
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
2b2bdoo
I’ve got one for my little office in the house and it does just enough to keep me warm. As I’ve got a 3 story house if I put the heating on it warms two floors when all I need is a bit of warmth in the smallest office room. It’s decent enough.
Same as what I do. Pointless heating the rest of the house when I can shut myself in one room and use one of these.
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
2b2bdoo
I’ve got one for my little office in the house and it does just enough to keep me warm. As I’ve got a 3 story house if I put the heating on it warms two floors when all I need is a bit of warmth in the smallest office room. It’s decent enough.
You can turn off the rads in the rest of the house ?
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
The Bloop
Same as what I do. Pointless heating the rest of the house when I can shut myself in one room and use one of these.
Switch on radiator in your room
Switch off radiators elsewhere
If its cheaper to run one rad I will stick with it but I am trying to work out if these mini portable radiators will be cheaper again than the main central heating rad
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Taunton Blue Genie
Hence the wheels.
Don't come that with me
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
lardy
20p for 12 hours doesn't sound expensive (if true).
It certainly doesn't
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
electricity is about 3.5 times as expensive as gas for the same amount of energy, but then you have to also factor in how large the area you are heating I.e. 1 room Vs 1 house and also the efficiency of the heaters.
for 1 room only electric is probably fine
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Rjk
electricity is about 3.5 times as expensive as gas for the same amount of energy, but then you have to also factor in how large the area you are heating I.e. 1 room Vs 1 house and also the efficiency of the heaters.
for 1 room only electric is probably fine
I have a cheapo electric fire with fake flames but I rarely put the heat function on that it has as its too expensive
I would think the oil filled rad , run by electricity , is considerably cheaper than that
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
SLUDGE FACTORY
Switch on radiator in your room
Switch off radiators elsewhere
If its cheaper to run one rad I will stick with it but I am trying to work out if these mini portable radiators will be cheaper again than the main central heating rad
That's a lot of faffing about each day. I don't know what the cheapest option is, but using a single oil filled rad for about 5 hours a day suits me.
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
I had a small 800 W oil filled rad ( smallest I could find ), used to use it in the caravan or the VW splity all the time, they used to say it used to cost 2p a hour to run, which I was more than happy with
I used in the conservatory in the milder evenings, it was no good in the depths of winter and it was freezing out there
the only downside is that it just heats the air around it, so if you are 10ft away, you might to feel the warmth for a few hours ( depending on the output of the heater ) , leave it on all the time and it'll keep a room warm though, its just slow as it has no fan
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
When Council / housing associations / MOD ( ive worked for all 3 ) houses lost heating, we always used to supply these
https://www.screwfix.com/p/ch-2000m-...st-2000w/716fy
ive got 2 in the shed for emergencies, they work well and while 2000 W will not be as cheap as 1000 W, they do work well
I fitted one of these
https://www.screwfix.com/p/blyss-sar...te-1500w/195jk
in the mancave / games room, I went with 1500 W as its slightly cheaper to run, I can run all the power ( with this heater included ) from a 13A fixed spur unit ( or a plug if needed ) as its all under 3 KW of power
it heats a 5 M X 3M well insulated space really , last week it was Minus 4 C outside and I was sat in there with a hoodie and some joggers on, when I started boxing ( in VR ) I had to take the Hoodie off, so the heater was well upto the job and cost 40p per hour to run
this site has a calculator with all the tariffs
https://www.sust-it.net/heating-energy-calculator.php
select the size of your heater and away you go
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
blue matt
I had a small 800 W oil filled rad ( smallest I could find ), used to use it in the caravan or the VW splity all the time, they used to say it used to cost 2p a hour to run, which I was more than happy with
I used in the conservatory in the milder evenings, it was no good in the depths of winter and it was freezing out there
the only downside is that it just heats the air around it, so if you are 10ft away, you might to feel the warmth for a few hours ( depending on the output of the heater ) , leave it on all the time and it'll keep a room warm though, its just slow as it has no fan
Yes 800w is small but fine to keep the chill off
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
blue matt
When Council / housing associations / MOD ( ive worked for all 3 ) houses lost heating, we always used to supply these
https://www.screwfix.com/p/ch-2000m-...st-2000w/716fy
ive got 2 in the shed for emergencies, they work well and while 2000 W will not be as cheap as 1000 W, they do work well
I fitted one of these
https://www.screwfix.com/p/blyss-sar...te-1500w/195jk
in the mancave / games room, I went with 1500 W as its slightly cheaper to run, I can run all the power ( with this heater included ) from a 13A fixed spur unit ( or a plug if needed ) as its all under 3 KW of power
it heats a 5 M X 3M well insulated space really , last week it was Minus 4 C outside and I was sat in there with a hoodie and some joggers on, when I started boxing ( in VR ) I had to take the Hoodie off, so the heater was well upto the job and cost 40p per hour to run
this site has a calculator with all the tariffs
https://www.sust-it.net/heating-energy-calculator.php
select the size of your heater and away you go
Do these come free standing without the hassle of a wall fix
Easy to a chippy
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
SLUDGE FACTORY
The little ones on wheels you can get from argos etc
Are they any good ?
With the energy bills as they are was thinking of grabbing a couple instead of firing up the central heating
Cheaper to run ?
Turn the heating on you tight fu**er
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Those heaters have mixed reviews on the sites Blue Matt posted. They look like electric heaters, what's the oil component?
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
NinianOpinion1927
Those heaters have mixed reviews on the sites Blue Matt posted. They look like electric heaters, what's the oil component?
they are, Screwfix do oil filled though
https://www.screwfix.com/c/heating-p...-oilfilledrads
Re: Oil filled portable radiators
Quote:
Originally Posted by
NinianOpinion1927
Those heaters have mixed reviews on the sites Blue Matt posted. They look like electric heaters, what's the oil component?
From what I can gather oil filled radiators at say 1.5 kW cost the same as 1.5 kW Electric heaters wether that be convection or fan