Just came across this deal on a 5000 watt 208/240 heater. It has settings for 3000, 4000, and 5000 watts. $69.99 and free shipping on orders over $99. 2 of these would make a dandy load bank you can use as a heater to boot.
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These are meant to be hung. They generate a lot of heat and would be unsafe on the ground. They are also meant to be hardwired, no leads.It says there must be 6 feet between the unit and the floor.
Is this necessary?
Im looking at getting two, but don't want to permanently mount them. Would it be an issue to leave them on the ground while they run for an hour or so?
Thanks
I would not run heater directly sitting on ground but I have run mine as a load test/monthly exercise run for my MEP-002a sitting outside positioned securely up on concrete blocks on gravel surface (nothing flammable close by). I wired mine using 10 AWG SOOW copper wire 12' cable with a plug on the end so I can either plug into my spider box on my genset or hang from the included mount on shop ceiling and then plug into my nearby 240 V outlet in shop. That way it becomes a multipurpose unit and is working fine that way. BTW, I was impressed with the build quality of the heater, its a steal at the discounted price!It says there must be 6 feet between the unit and the floor.
Is this necessary?
Im looking at getting two, but don't want to permanently mount them. Would it be an issue to leave them on the ground while they run for an hour or so?
Thanks
How hot does the bracket get where it attaches to the tripod? How thick was the flat steel?I have had the same unit for the past 13 months (at the same price) and have been very pleased. The bracket that comes with the unit is only designed for hanging, the sides are too short to be flipped, but with a piece of flat steel, two bends, and 5 holes, you can mount it to a tripod. I used the "Heat Storm Tripod Stand" from amazon which seems to have gone up in price. This tripod and a plug that matches my welder allows me to have portable heat in my barn and with an adapter plug, lets me use the heater in the drier plug at my house as a backup heat source if I am unable to get propane delivery.
That's way more precise than I needed.... but had exactly the information I need. THANKS!!!!It worked out that I was starting and loading my 802 this weekend so I took some measurements. Bracket is made of 3/16 thick because thats what I had laying around, but is very much overkill. The unit is not very heavy at all. Measurements were taken after running the 5000 setting for 45 minutes in my barn with the doors closed (no other airflow other than the fan on this unit). Unit has 4 louvers to direct air up or down. I placed these at a 45 degree angle up to force airflow over them and get you a good measurement of how hot they will get under normal operation.
Bottom of the tripod leg - 31F
Top of tripod upright just below bracket - 33.3F
Bottom of heater - 43.3F
Side of heater - 57.4F
Side of bracket - 44.1F
Bottom of Bracket - 33.4F
Top of heater - 51.4F
Louver - 153.1F
The manufacturer will always default to the least educated person's abilities and knowledge that is using their product. As long as there is sufficient air flow around the unit and no contact with flammables, there shouldn't be any problems.For what it's worth my homemade load bank is similar in design and twice the output. I have always run it sitting on the ground and yet to have any problems.
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