Jacob
What goes around comes around.
Anybody had any experience of Nextgen, or anything similar? https://nexgenheating.com/about-us
Looks like a really good idea
Looks like a really good idea
1/10th the output over 50 times the area of a normal radiant heater. Not unlike under floor low temp heating as required by heat pumps.It states it is safe as it runs at 24V, however my simple off the cuff calculations show that this would require quite alarming Current.
That's exactly the same idea as Nextgen. It's not only about the amount of heat but also about how and where it's delivered. A radiant source can warm the person without having to warm the whole room and everything in it.....
I have been working with Infra-Red heating systems for all my carreer and they do have their advantages and uses. Most will have seen those long black tubes in places like garden centres and fet the warmth on their heads. They are great for places like this as they warm up people and not the air in between.
I agree that's priorityWhat is really needed is to remove the heat loss in the first place by insulating and draught proofing. Even the highest standards we use today fall short in my opinion of making this system viable for most.
Bin there dunnit! Had a wintery week in Tokyo with some resident friends.........
The use of electric heating is maybe more widespread than we realise. If you google "kotatsu" and read about the culture around it, you discover that many apartments in Japan are heated only by electricity, often with air conditioners that do both heating and cooling. They have hard enough winters and it is expensive, so it is common for the living room to be arranged around a low table with a quartz IR heating lamp fitted to the underneath. About 600 watts.
A special quilt is draped over the table reaching to the floor to keep in the heat and a second table top then holds everything in place and provides a work surface for daily life. People (and pets) sit, lie, even sleep around the table, tucked under the quilt to keep warm while no doubt the apartment is left quite cool.
No doubt it isn't perfect but it's an interesting idea nevertheless.Hi Jacob, I agree with where you are coming from if the system is entirely radiant. However thay state that it is 50/50 radiant and thermal, and that the surface temperature will not exceed 45ºC. This means it is producing a significan amount of thermal energy which is going to try and heat the air and objects in the room. As it is on the ceiling there will be minimum convection (hot air rises after all) so you are likely to have a hot zone up by the ceiling exactly where it will be of least benifit.
Think about those old glowing radiant heaters we all used to have in our bathrooms, you felt the warmth from them when in line but your bath sill got cold quickly, and you didn't hang about getting out and dressed!
I wouldn't suggest you do either, until you've looked into it!.....
Until I see these I for one cannot in all concience recomend them to my clients.
That's my daughter's situation. She has far-IR heaters fitted in her ceilings and thinks they are excellent, both in terms of heat (quickly, on demand) and economy. She switches them on with her phone 15 minutes before she gets home.I can see them suiting small city apartments used by people who aren't home much.
There is no efficiency gain but there is less energy wasted with the "right" radiant heat - well known simple fact.My initial reaction is snake oil.
I accept the principal that heating the person not the space may create a similar level of comfort for less energy use. although a comparison may better be made with heated clothing.
However there seems to be no efficiency gain (300%+ for heat pump technology) and I assume the basic laws of physics continue to apply. I see application for bathrooms etc where heat is needed for swift effect and limited duration.
Most will have seen those long black tubes in places like garden centres and fet the warmth on their heads.
so just a money making scheme until the truth comes out.It'll be subsidised heavily and endlessly.
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