Carolina
DIY
I have an 80's oil-filled heater at home and although it's almost in mint condition on the outside, it's the heating element that's giving me trouble, it's on its way out as it's only using about 700W out of the 1500W the heater is rated at, because of this, the oil and fins never hit a temperature high enough to make the thermostat kick in, so it's constantly drawing power rather than clicking on and off.
I was thinking I could bring it back to life, BUT (there's always a but), I only have a 15 amp heating element @ home, it works and from the looks of it will fit my heater... question is, what could go wrong?! I know I'll have to redo the wiring and front panel, I'd be replacing all the inner wiring for 2.5mm² silicone insulated rated for 180ºC, all wire terminals, the 10A switches and thermostat for a pair that can handle 20A, and of course the cable and plug end for something a bit better that can handle the higher current... but specifically talking about the oil, is there a chance pressure inside the heater could increase due to the new heating element doing it's thing but faster? could it make the oil hit boiling point before the thermostat kicks in? as we all know, boiling oil is often bad, except if you're cooking.
Diathermic oil isn't hard for me to get, just have to take a few steps down to the basement ^^ I used it for some other heaters already but the can says nothing about the temperatures it can handle, even so, the heater still has oil inside but I was thinking I should flush it out when replacing the heating element.
Maybe I'm just overthinking it and the thermostat will prevent the oil from heating up too much. Maybe not, I've repaired heaters before but never thought about the what ifs and possible modifications.
Oh, and by the way, the heater has 10 fins, not sure if that matters. Input ~240V, wall sockets can handle 16A.
In a side note, I've been seeing a lot of these things (and some alternate models) where I live, they pull as much as they can from the wall to the point the wires get hot, then too hot, then the plug contacts get hot, the socket melts... and boom. I rather NOT get one of these things.
I was thinking I could bring it back to life, BUT (there's always a but), I only have a 15 amp heating element @ home, it works and from the looks of it will fit my heater... question is, what could go wrong?! I know I'll have to redo the wiring and front panel, I'd be replacing all the inner wiring for 2.5mm² silicone insulated rated for 180ºC, all wire terminals, the 10A switches and thermostat for a pair that can handle 20A, and of course the cable and plug end for something a bit better that can handle the higher current... but specifically talking about the oil, is there a chance pressure inside the heater could increase due to the new heating element doing it's thing but faster? could it make the oil hit boiling point before the thermostat kicks in? as we all know, boiling oil is often bad, except if you're cooking.
Diathermic oil isn't hard for me to get, just have to take a few steps down to the basement ^^ I used it for some other heaters already but the can says nothing about the temperatures it can handle, even so, the heater still has oil inside but I was thinking I should flush it out when replacing the heating element.
Maybe I'm just overthinking it and the thermostat will prevent the oil from heating up too much. Maybe not, I've repaired heaters before but never thought about the what ifs and possible modifications.
Oh, and by the way, the heater has 10 fins, not sure if that matters. Input ~240V, wall sockets can handle 16A.
In a side note, I've been seeing a lot of these things (and some alternate models) where I live, they pull as much as they can from the wall to the point the wires get hot, then too hot, then the plug contacts get hot, the socket melts... and boom. I rather NOT get one of these things.
- TL;DR
- Oil+heat=fire?