Any Kerosene Heater Veterans?
I'm on the edge of buying my first kerosene heater and looking for insight as far as models, safety, efficiency, but most of all health as far as exhaust from fuel burn off.
I have electric heat and its going to leave me with a prolapsed rectum come December thru Febuary. Any insight appreciated. |
used one for years, until we installed an unvented propane heater on the wall and didn't need the kerosene anymore. it was very handy one time when we had an ice storm and lost power for 10 days.
i loaned it to a guy to "try out", and the ****er moved away and never gave it back to me.:mad: this was about 15 years ago...probably better now than they were then. can't remember the brand name of it. sec |
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hell, i liked it, but we went w/the unvented propane wall mount because the wife was working for a propane company. we were getting a good deal on the heaters and the propane. they both(kerosene & propane) beat the hell out of that electric ceiling heat that was in the old farmhouse when we bought it. sec |
for the life of me, i can't remember what brand it was...if i knew where that shitbird moved to, i'd call his ass up and ask him. he and his wife used it in an old store they had for a few years, then packed up and moved.
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:toast: |
Used one in the basement office in KC for 8 winters with no complaints. Used for 9 days after an ice storm took out everything in TX.
Other than the initial black smoke and smell when you first light the wick, they are solid. |
I used one in NC when we lived out there and it was great. Fuel is expensive, but it burns forever, and it gets fracking hot.
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This isn't the exact model, but pretty close: http://www.homedepot.com/Electrical-...&storeId=10051 |
the ones we use on jobsites leave black sooty residue on things.
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The big white ones with the metal cage around em will heat up a 1600 sq ft house without need of secondary heat. The draw back is you gotta keep em away from walls. So, the can be "in the way". The smaller ones heat around 1000 sq ft. But you can put em right up against the wall with no worries. Most of the smaller models have a removable tank that can be filled outside. Saves on spilling messes. A carbon monoxide detector should be used anytime an open flame heater is used. Period. I live in a large farm house been using kerosene 10 years. I have both types.
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There are special funnel filters that help to clean kerosene that you'd buy from gas station (cheaper). Gas station kerosene seems to always be dirtier than store bought K1. Dirty fuel unfiltered will destroy your wick in as little as a month. Using kerosene additive seems to help this but I recommend buying a filter funnel. Could also mix 50/50 with store bought stuff.
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