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date: Mon, 15 Sep 2008 11:19:31 +0100,
group: uk.d-i-y
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Panel heater wiring
Hi
I have a study/spare bedroom with a fitted desk and drawer units along
an outside wall. The 'hole' at which I sit is a useful place for a
panel heater - last winter I had a slimline floor standing one
http://tinyurl.com/5dapvd
But it was borrowed, ugly, and leaked. This winter I'd like to instal
something like
http://tinyurl.com/6hsy58
Problem is I have no adjacent sockets. The De Longhi came with an
ordinary moulded plug that went into an extension lead. All the
Dimplex heaters seem to be intended for installation into a fused spur,
and have a fourth (pilot) wire in the flex (and no plug). I have no
intention of messing around with remote control, so the pilot would be
redundant.
Will the world stop turning if I connect the Dimplex to a plug (750
watt model with, say, a 5 amp fuse) and use the same extension lead as
last year? According to the instructions, the pilot wire can be live,
so it'll need to be carefully insulated inside the plug. Is that a
bodge too far?
--
Roger Morton
roger@chez-morton.com
date: Mon, 15 Sep 2008 11:19:31 +0100
author: lid (Roger Morton)
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Re: Panel heater wiring
In <TtdDwKcFPkau0ty.1XwPCw@LIVING>, Roger Morton wrote:
>
> All the Dimplex heaters seem to be intended for installation
> into a fused spur, and have a fourth (pilot) wire in the flex
> (and no plug). I have no intention of messing around with
> remote control, so the pilot would be redundant.
>
> Will the world stop turning if I connect the Dimplex to a plug
> (750 watt model with, say, a 5 amp fuse) and use the same
> extension lead as last year? According to the instructions,
> the pilot wire can be live, so it'll need to be carefully
> insulated inside the plug. Is that a bodge too far?
>
Hold that.
Searching the Dimplex range of *commercial* heating I come across
the PLX range, which looks very similar to the EPX range I found
above - but no pilot wire.
But again - they seem to expect connection (of a 3-wire flex) to a
fused spur. Presumably the idea of shoving a plug on it would be a
bit more palatable than trying it on a 4-wire?
--
Roger Morton
roger@chez-morton.com
date: Mon, 15 Sep 2008 12:57:29 +0100
author: lid (Roger Morton)
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