Hard to find enough footage often times for the baseboard.
Fan forced wall heater vs baseboard.
Replacing baseboard heaters with forced air systems is a common decision that a lot of homeowners make.
Although all electric heat is 100 percent efficient you can see some energy savings with a wall heater because it takes less time to heat a room.
I went to price baseboard heaters today see prior thread and saw that they also have forced air wall heaters that are tiny.
I am torn between the two devices a bit.
If it is only one baseboard in the kitchen on the loop or zone why not just swap a kick space or wall cabinet heater for the baseboard.
This guide will help you choose between a baseboard heater and a wall heater when replacing an old unit.
Wall heaters are great in rooms that you want to heat up fast.
Or add some floor radiant kitchens on outside wall pose a challange for baseboard.
The fan helps circulate air through the room while baseboards rely just on the natural convection process.
Radiant heating on the other hand involves the transfer of heat to a mass that holds it and releases it into the living space.
After that you save money each year.
This blog will compare the baseboard heaters and wall fan heaters based on their lifespan temperature amount of noise and wall space required.
Wall mounted convection heaters for bedrooms and living spaces.
The primary difference between electric wall heaters and electric baseboard heaters are in how that heat is delivered to the room.
And while radiant panels are slightly more expensive than wall or baseboard heaters the increased efficiency of a radiant heat ceiling panel means that you will recoup the cost of the radiant heater in just 3 years for a baseboard and 6 years for a wall heater.
They have a register style with a squirrel cage fan that would force some air circulation they also have baseboard convection heaters.
The electric wall heater has a small fan in it.
Installing an electric wall heater is little more than cutting a square hole in the wall running 120v or 240v wiring into the device securing the device to the wall and turning it on.
I suspect the kick space heaters were developed specfically for this.
If you have wire access you can have a heater.
Wall heaters are point of service heating at its best.
All our heaters are quiet.
For instance the one i saw was a com pac by cadet and it was 4000 watts and took up a space about the size of a sheet of writing paper x 4 deep.
You can target a cold area with one of these devices and heat.
While electric baseboard heaters are easier and cheaper to install than forced air systems or hydronic baseboard heaters they are also less energy efficient and can hurt your wallet in the long run.
I am looking at a cadet brand electric heating for retrofitting a garage to be family room.
The fan blows across the heated elements forcing the heat through the grill and into the room.