gonna try one of these, been running an 80 dollar vornado for 3 years its still going strong but just need a lil bit more heat for my garage so ima switch up and try this for a lil bit
Thanks for the review. Since my home has no central heating, I need heaters like this to keep my house warm, I'm always looking for more energy efficient heaters.
1500 watts is the power consumption, but different sources have different efficiencies of converting that power from electric to heat. So from a electrical draw perspective, you are correct, from a heating capability, there can be variance.
Its always a good practice to keep other adjacent rooms reasonably warm. If you've ever lived on the top floor you know what I mean.
gonna try one of these, been running an 80 dollar vornado for 3 years its still going strong but just need a lil bit more heat for my garage so ima switch up and try this for a lil bit
Great review. Just got one as a gift. Thanks so much!
Great video
What is the square feet it heats for “large room”
Can’t find the info on that
Keep up the videos
God Bless
@@fredr.5723 should be in the descriptions on the product page
I hope it works as it gets very cold in Western North Carolina
@@michaelsisk5938 you good to go
Thanks for the review. Since my home has no central heating, I need heaters like this to keep my house warm, I'm always looking for more energy efficient heaters.
Garage yes,, if the garage doors are closed,,it's a 1 room heater,,so you would have to get 1 for each area you want to heat
Thank you!
Is that one the same or an upgrade to the old one?
@@cosmeticsandpurseswithevelyn upgrade to the first one
You didn't show how to switch from Fahrenheit to Celsius.
Important question: How well does it heat? How big a room? Etc....
@@DavidGlover-s7x very well...I leave mine in like 72 or 74 and it's nice and toasty
@@ThomasReviews Same but is it supposed to shut off when the 72 is reached or keep running coz I set it on low 72 & it’s still blaring..Thanks
My question is, isn’t 1500 watts 1500 watts. Aren’t all 1500 watt machines producing the same amount of heat?
1500 watts is the power consumption, but different sources have different efficiencies of converting that power from electric to heat. So from a electrical draw perspective, you are correct, from a heating capability, there can be variance.