Jymbob
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Don't bite my head off...
My mother-in-law has recently had her kitchen redone, and has realised now it's autumn that she needs more heat in there. As it would involve ripping everything up to run pipes for another radiator on the opposite wall to the existing one, she's looking at a wall-mounted electric one, preferably just on a normal 13A plug.
Her central heating is controlled by a Nest thermostat, and so my suggestion was to get a dumb heater and a smart plug, so the Nest can trigger the plug when it switches to and from 'Heat' (via IFTTT).
Most off-the-shelf plug in heaters however tend to come with some software timers etc, which means they're not designed to be switched on and off at the wall (and often won't start up "on" when they're powered up).
My question: is there any reason why she couldn't get a standard "towel-rail" style heater with a 300-500W immersion element and wire it to a plug? Do the regs state it has to be on a switched spur?
I know in a bathroom/dual-fuel environment there are requirements around having RCD protection, but is this true for all heaters?
Thanks.
My mother-in-law has recently had her kitchen redone, and has realised now it's autumn that she needs more heat in there. As it would involve ripping everything up to run pipes for another radiator on the opposite wall to the existing one, she's looking at a wall-mounted electric one, preferably just on a normal 13A plug.
Her central heating is controlled by a Nest thermostat, and so my suggestion was to get a dumb heater and a smart plug, so the Nest can trigger the plug when it switches to and from 'Heat' (via IFTTT).
Most off-the-shelf plug in heaters however tend to come with some software timers etc, which means they're not designed to be switched on and off at the wall (and often won't start up "on" when they're powered up).
My question: is there any reason why she couldn't get a standard "towel-rail" style heater with a 300-500W immersion element and wire it to a plug? Do the regs state it has to be on a switched spur?
I know in a bathroom/dual-fuel environment there are requirements around having RCD protection, but is this true for all heaters?
Thanks.