12 volt electric blanket
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- adam2
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12 volt electric blanket
These are available from Maplin
http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?ModuleNo=224946
The price has recently been reduced from £25 down to £10, this reduction suggests that they did not sell well, and perhaps wont be stocked in future?
Might be a useful prep for cold weather and fuel shortages. For other than brief use a large battery will be required since the load is stated to be 3 amps.
EDIT I have now purchased one of these blankets, although the website states the consumption at 3 amps, the packaging states that it uses 4 amps.
I found the actual measured consumption to be a little over 4 amps.
I dont know how well made or safe these are and would advise caution in use, the law sets very high standards of safety for mains electric blankets, but I suspect that 12 volt ones may be exempt.
I dont normaly use an electric blanket, prefering ordinary woollen blankets, though I would regard a 12 volt electric blanket as prudent to have in case of severe weather etc.
(the last one I bought cost about $100, from the USA , since at the time they were not available in the UK)
EDITED with update re 4 amps used not 3
http://www.maplin.co.uk/Module.aspx?ModuleNo=224946
The price has recently been reduced from £25 down to £10, this reduction suggests that they did not sell well, and perhaps wont be stocked in future?
Might be a useful prep for cold weather and fuel shortages. For other than brief use a large battery will be required since the load is stated to be 3 amps.
EDIT I have now purchased one of these blankets, although the website states the consumption at 3 amps, the packaging states that it uses 4 amps.
I found the actual measured consumption to be a little over 4 amps.
I dont know how well made or safe these are and would advise caution in use, the law sets very high standards of safety for mains electric blankets, but I suspect that 12 volt ones may be exempt.
I dont normaly use an electric blanket, prefering ordinary woollen blankets, though I would regard a 12 volt electric blanket as prudent to have in case of severe weather etc.
(the last one I bought cost about $100, from the USA , since at the time they were not available in the UK)
EDITED with update re 4 amps used not 3
Last edited by adam2 on 12 Sep 2008, 07:54, edited 1 time in total.
"Installers and owners of emergency diesels must assume that they will have to run for a week or more"
'Continental people have sex life: the English have hot-water bottles.' That was all. It has now become hopelessly out-of-date. How right was the kind (and to me unknown) lady who wrote to me in a letter:
'You are really behind the times. In this field, too, things have changed, and - this is the most important - techniques have advanced. We are using electric blankets nowadays.'
'You are really behind the times. In this field, too, things have changed, and - this is the most important - techniques have advanced. We are using electric blankets nowadays.'
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And, for Adam2, you can by a 240v to 12v converter with car plug in type socket for the 12v for a tenner here:
http://www.m-99.co.uk/Electrical/240v_M ... verte.html
Woud this be safe to use warming up the bed in an unheated bedroom when the weather gets really cold?
http://www.m-99.co.uk/Electrical/240v_M ... verte.html
Woud this be safe to use warming up the bed in an unheated bedroom when the weather gets really cold?
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Tom, I'm shocked at your laziness. But not half as shocked as you'll be if your electric blanket is faultytomhitchman wrote:JohnB, last year did hot water bottles which actually was quite good but the top of my stove is only a few inches away from the roof of the fire so have to heat water in lots of little pans and is quite time intensive so getting a little bit lazy....
- RenewableCandy
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Are there stone blocks or slabs you can just rest on the top of the stove, then slip them into cloth wrappers when they're warmed up? Less hassle than messing about with pans, and won't leak in your bed. IIRC Tattercoats' (?) Chilli Penguin has them sort of built-in.JohnB wrote:Tom, I'm shocked at your laziness. But not half as shocked as you'll be if your electric blanket is faultytomhitchman wrote:JohnB, last year did hot water bottles which actually was quite good but the top of my stove is only a few inches away from the roof of the fire so have to heat water in lots of little pans and is quite time intensive so getting a little bit lazy....
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- RenewableCandy
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Such consumate laziness...truly, I am in awe !tomhitchman wrote:RC I had thought about this last year but didn't get around to it. I have some unused paving slabs in the garden so may take a hammer to one to see if can break cleanly and give it a try.
Down south it is nowhere near cold enough just yet, lounge hasn't been beneath 19C as yet.
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So doing some research here are the reletive heat capacities of concrete and water:
Water 4186
Concrete 2060
(volumetric heat capacity, KJ/m³.k)
So would I have to have a concrete wrap double the size of the old hot water bottle method for the same heat?
Any ideas how best to make it cuddleable? Is this a new business idea in changing times?
Water 4186
Concrete 2060
(volumetric heat capacity, KJ/m³.k)
So would I have to have a concrete wrap double the size of the old hot water bottle method for the same heat?
Any ideas how best to make it cuddleable? Is this a new business idea in changing times?
- RenewableCandy
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Knock the corners off so it's vaguely round, then get some quilted cloth and stitch up a cover of roughly the same shape but a bit bigger, with 1-2 "sides" left open so you can put the stone in.tomhitchman wrote: Any ideas how best to make it cuddleable? Is this a new business idea in changing times?
Now I come to think of it the stone's capable of getting hotter than water is, you'll have to make sure it stays below "Farenheit 451"...
When I was a kid, we had a rayburn, but no CH for a while - (clean) housebrick in the bottom oven until v. hot then wrapped in a thick wool blanket. Put in bottom of bed - could barely put your feet near them to start with, but kept the bed warm for ages. Fantastic. Radiates the heat far slower than water HW bottle.tomhitchman wrote:So doing some research here are the reletive heat capacities of concrete and water:
Water 4186
Concrete 2060
(volumetric heat capacity, KJ/m³.k)
So would I have to have a concrete wrap double the size of the old hot water bottle method for the same heat?
Any ideas how best to make it cuddleable? Is this a new business idea in changing times?