Short question: do the more expensive oil heaters do a better job than the cheaper ones? Consumer seems to think they do.
Longer question:
We mostly use heat pumps to heat our home, but when we're sleeping and in an office that doesn't get much heat from the heat pumps we use oil heaters. The house is well insulated, double glazed, well ventilated.
The oil heaters in the bedrooms are 4 fin / 1000W heaters I got from The Warehouse for about $25 each about 10 years ago. They work great. On about 1/3 they keep bedrooms about the right temperature in winter, given the heat pumps have already warmed the whole house. Their surface temperature is about 95 degrees.
In my home office I appreciate quiet heating. I use a fan heater to warm it up (during my free hour of power) then an oil heater to keep it warm while I'm working. The 1000W heaters weren't keeping it warm enough during the recent cold days, so I went up to 2400W. I figure power in = heat out so I buy the cheapest one that isn't too ugly. I do understand that the heat goes straight up, and that a fan to distribute the heat makes them much more effective, but I don't want a fan on all the time.
So far I'm fairly disappointed by the relatively low priced oil heaters I purchased:
- The Goldair 2400W ($70 or so from Briscoes) came with a manual timer that ticked every two seconds. It went back immediately.
- The K-Mart 2400W ($60) is silent, but when I hold my hand over it the heat coming off it feels less than the heat off the old 1000W oil heaters. It warms the room ok, not great. It's 11 fin instead of 4 fin but the power to fin ratio is about the same. I find even with the thermostat on max it cuts off heating earlier than I would expect, maybe to prevent the surface getting too hot. The surface temperature is about 95 degrees near the top and about 75 degrees near the bottom, give or take ten degrees. This is the consumer lowest rated oil heater, and the cheapest.
Consumer says the $60 K-Mart heater is slow to warm the room, but the $350 DeLonghi warms the room more quickly. It says both keep the room warm quite well. The DeLonghi has quite a different design from the cheaper oil heaters, they're more boxy whereas the cheaper ones are more finned.
Q: Does the brand / design of an oil heater really make any difference?