by ericmark »
Mon Jul 29, 2019 9:01 am
As said inferred means fast warm-up times, so the hotter the surface is the better at heating, but also the hotter the surface the more dangerous to touch, so in the main we forget about inferred, so then you are still looking at speed and of course what they look like.
For a kitchen a plinth fan heater is likely best, but you would not want a fan heater for the bedroom.
I find the idea of fan assisted good, but not so sure how practical, if you use any fan, does not need to be built into the heater, it gets rid of cool and warm spots within the room, this is mixed blessing, as one can lose heat from surfaces and also gain heat when the sun is out, so it is more down to home design as to if a fan is good or bad.
Having independent heaters allows independent control of each room, but how far you want to go is a big question, I had all sorts of ideas when using standard central heating as to where to place the thermostat, it was wireless so I could place it anywhere in the room, it transpired best place was quite close to the radiator, as one moves away the hysteresis increases. So against what I expected, the TRV is well placed to get a steady temperature in the room. The same applies with oil filled radiators with the thermostat built in.
OK you want thin panel which again depends on home, if the home absorbs heat from panel and then once off releases it slowly then with it switching off/on once an hour it will work fine, but if the house stores very little heat, at once an hour you would feel chill before it switched on again.
Rapid switching would soon cause contacts in a mechanical thermostat to fail, so controlled with a solid state relay far better for rapid switching.
So the whole question hinges on the design of the home, other than inferred or heat pumps, all electric heaters kW in = kW out so all same efficiency, it's only the control which varies.
Old central heating systems did lack control, I will admit that, however today the modulating gas boiler linked to radiators with electronic TRV's gives us individual schedule for every room and is much improved since the 1980's when central heating started to become the norm with new homes.
You have not answered the question why get rid of gas? I am stuck with oil, I would love it if gas came to the village. If we know more about you home and/or reasons for not wanting gas, maybe we could help more, however with so little to go on, really it's a case of selecting what looks nice.