Yes, I thought it might be for such a reason.
As I said, you might as well turn it off, then.
As I said, you might as well turn it off, then.
Close the door to that room perhaps? Put a stair gate up if your bathroom is upstairs? Fire guard?I want it to be on so i can use it for its intended purpose but i have a dog and toddler at home. I dont want either of them to burn themselves with it. So i want to be able to lower the temperature so it atleast wont burn them if they were to get to it.
The controller I have shown will allow a temperature to be chosen which is hot enough to dry and warm towels, but not cause burns. They will still heat a small bathroom at reduced heat too.Yes, I thought it might be for such a reason.
As I said, you might as well turn it off, then.
It’s been replaced by the digital one I linked to at TLC, but it’s rebranded under loads of guises.Dunno if they still do, but Dimplex used to make a dimmer switch style controller.
That seems to give you just over 4 hours to get it doneWill do it at the end of the month ...
Rubbish. It is intended to get warm or hot - being a heating device does not automatically mean it has to be too hot to touch. Even radiators intended for room heaters don't automatically have to be too hot to touch - look up LST (low surface temperature) radiators.No one seems to be querying the original - in my view - misunderstanding.
I noticed that
It is supposed to. It is a heating appliance.My towel rail gets too hot to touch.
Or it could just be working to spec - and yes, it is too hot to touch. The OP hasn't provided any details on the actual heater installed - it is possible that it already has a thermostat and he just hasn't found it - the solution may be as simple as turning it down.It could be faulty but 65 - 80° is too hot to touch.
Rubbish. It can be "safe to touch" hot and still dry towels. I would suggest that most towel rails are useless at heating the room regardless - unless you fill them with some exotic fluid and run them at a hundred and silly ˚C I'm aiming at running ours in the bathroom at 40˚C or lower - some experimentation required as I haven't got the controls done for the new setup, and I think I might need a lower kvs mixing valve than the one I have installed (had to guestimate the size needed in the absence of any data to work with). It only needs a low heat output so that moisture in the towels will evaporate off over time.If you want it able to be touched all the time, you might as well turn it off.
Rubbish. It is intended to get warm or hot - being a heating device does not automatically mean it has to be too hot to touch. Even radiators intended for room heaters don't automatically have to be too hot to touch - look up LST (low surface temperature) radiators.
Or it could just be working to spec - and yes, it is too hot to touch. The OP hasn't provided any details on the actual heater installed - it is possible that it already has a thermostat and he just hasn't found it - the solution may be as simple as turning it down.
Rubbish. It can be "safe to touch" hot and still dry towels. I would suggest that most towel rails are useless at heating the room regardless - unless you fill them with some exotic fluid and run them at a hundred and silly ˚C I'm aiming at running ours in the bathroom at 40˚C or lower - some experimentation required as I haven't got the controls done for the new setup, and I think I might need a lower kvs mixing valve than the one I have installed (had to guestimate the size needed in the absence of any data to work with). It only needs a low heat output so that moisture in the towels will evaporate off over time.