electric heat

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Brickren
United States of America
Posts: 183
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 1:39 pm
Location: NW Pa.
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electric heat

Post by Brickren »

Has anyone put electric heaters in cab? I'm thinking disconnect ducting from heat exchanger and plumb to some type of electric heater for instant defrost and foot warmth. Thanks. Brian.
1975 710M
2000 Ural Tourist
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TechMOGogy
Canada
Posts: 2831
Joined: Wed Feb 01, 2012 11:39 am
Location: Ontario, Canada

Re: electric heat

Post by TechMOGogy »

Search will help answer that as it has been talked about a few times.
Electric draws a lot so most say your not going to get any real heat out a system unless you kill batteries.
Others have mentioned electric vests that people use on bikes.
72 Pathfinder | 75 710M 2.7i | 96 350GDT Worker
Pinz710m2

Re: electric heat

Post by Pinz710m2 »

eeeeee. (buzzer sound)

I have the 18,000 BTU electric heater and it draws way more than
it should, however, until I make some other modifications, I know that
it can't be used more than about 30 minutes while engine is running.
(It draws 10 amps more than the alternator can provide, so with the
engine running it's similar to leaving your lights on with no engine
running. It puts out a lot of heat, so I can't see running it continuously
anyway. Once I get some alterations (custom rebuilding an alternator
from scratch) I should be able to run it more.

Note: This is not an alteration to be taken lightly by the non-electrical
engineer inclined. As mentioned by others on the board, no one wants
to let the smoke out of the wiring in the Pinz. Electric heaters must
be cautiously wired (I went one gauge larger than I needed) and carefully
planned.
krick3tt
Posts: 2457
Joined: Thu Mar 16, 2006 6:48 pm
Location: Denver, CO USA

Re: electric heat

Post by krick3tt »

Not an engineer but I would shy away from electric heaters. I have a WeBasto that fits behind the driver seat and takes fuel from the petrol tank. Runs
all day on about a pint of fuel. Usually only have it on for mostly 15 to 20 min. I can leave it on while parked and running errands or at camp or on trail to perform tasks.

It will heat the cab, with the blackout curtain down, to the point that I have to open a window to cool off. This is in Colorado winter temps of 20 to 30 deg.
By the time I have gone 10 miles the heat exchanger is ready and able to take over. Wrapped the ducts to keep the heat in them till it reaches the cab.
Don't heat the back as there is no one in there.

Just my $.02.
Any man who thinks he can be happy and prosperous by letting the government take care of him:
better take a closer look at the American Indian.---Henry Ford
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