Model: Newair Electric Garage Heater, Adjustable Ceiling/ Wall Mounted with Tilt Head, Heats up to 500 sq. ft. of Space | Electric Heater for heating Garages, Workshops, warehouses, Job Sites, and More
Deal History
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Not necessarily. I wired mine to use with a NEMA plug in the event that I would need to use the outlet for something like a welder. Once you wire in a new 240v outlet to the correct size breaker, you just need to use the appropriate gauge cord and plug for the heater.
I have this exact heater for my garage and the one thing I can't stand about it is that the temp dial is located on the back of the unit.
This is a great price on a 5,000 watt heater, as dardars mentioned you can easily put a PROPER plug on these, but:
- You need to assure it's on the right type breaker and you're using correct cable size.
- It's an easy DIY, though I highly recommend using Polaris or Morris (cheaper but a good product) splice connectors instead of nut caps. It may add $25 to the project but way more than that in safety.
- Depending on your use and situation 5000 watts can be pretty undersized for a garage heater.
- The big "but" is that Newair heaters have a crappy reputation, check out the negative reviews for this unit and others.
Taking into account the above it's a great price if it fits your use and tolerance for potential problems.
It's also the same price at Target if you to save a few bucks with your red card.
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But this is 240V so I assume you need a special jack to plug this into?
But this is 240V so I assume you need a special jack to plug this into?
But this is 240V so I assume you need a special jack to plug this into?
Would have to be hardwired.
Not necessarily. I wired mine to use with a NEMA plug in the event that I would need to use the outlet for something like a welder. Once you wire in a new 240v outlet to the correct size breaker, you just need to use the appropriate gauge cord and plug for the heater.
I have this exact heater for my garage and the one thing I can't stand about it is that the temp dial is located on the back of the unit.
- You need to assure it's on the right type breaker and you're using correct cable size.
- It's an easy DIY, though I highly recommend using Polaris or Morris (cheaper but a good product) splice connectors instead of nut caps. It may add $25 to the project but way more than that in safety.
- Depending on your use and situation 5000 watts can be pretty undersized for a garage heater.
- The big "but" is that Newair heaters have a crappy reputation, check out the negative reviews for this unit and others.
Taking into account the above it's a great price if it fits your use and tolerance for potential problems.
It's also the same price at Target if you to save a few bucks with your red card.