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i recommend you avoid polluting the air in an enclosed space. So no oil burning inside the room. The central heating would be a much better option in my opinion
Alternatively, weak (1 to 5 kwh) electric heaters with good placement can heat rather large rooms without wasting nearly as much power
I think by "plugin" op means electric rafiator filled with some special oil that dissipates heat. So it's still electric just the heating element will heat and circulate oil.
Oh that's pretty cool, sorry for the misunderstanding
They said oil filled radiator, not oil burning. I expect it's a very efficient electric heater like these:
https://www.homedepot.com/b/Heating-Venting-Cooling-Heaters-Space-Heaters-Electric-Heaters-Radiant-Heaters/
If they are trying to keep one room warm and don't care about freezing the rest of the house those are very efficient.
I was thinking of one of those radiators that burn oil, and you have to fill them up before use. Thank you for clarifying!
ps. the link appears to not work for me? Maybe they have a region block?
This is the same layout as the device I was referring to:
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005004941338607.html
Oh that's an odd approach, it's just an electric heater with extra steps
Basically yes.
It adds some efficiency because once you have a radiator full of hot oil in the radiator it tends to release the heat for a long while after the electric is shut-off.
Most electric space heaters send a plume of hot air arcing upwards.
You end up with a nice heat storage device to radiate warmth at the level you want to use it for longer than a normal resistive space heater using the same energy.
I agree that burning oil would be a terrible idea. In this case, the oil would be in an enclosed radiator that is designed to function as an indoor heater. Thanks for looking out tho!
That is actually pretty cool! In that case, the slowness shouldn't be a big issue. As soon as you've got a comfortable temperature you only need to maintain it