
![]() Electric Resistance
Electric resistance heat is usually the most expensive form of heat and isn't recommended very much anymore. However, because electric resistance heating equipment doesn't cost very much, it tends to be popular where first cost is an issue, but operating costs are not. This is true when heating is rarely needed such as a lake home, or when the person who is having the equipment installed is not the one who will pay the utility bills, this is especially true in as in spec buildings and rental property. Resistance heat uses a metal element to convert electricity into heat. This element has a high resistance to the passage of electricity, and when it is forced to conduct electricity, it heats up in the same way a light bulb filament heats when an electric current passes through it. Heat produced by electric resistance units can be distributed to and throughout the living areas of the home in a number of ways. Perhaps the simplest method of distribution is to locate the resistance heating elements themselves within the room to be heated. Units can be installed on a baseboard or a wall, or can be portable. The resistance element heats the air around it, which then becomes warmer and less dense, and thus rises, creating a convection current, which carries the heated air away and circulates colder air to the unit.
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