It must waste less energy on emitting light or other forms of radiation then the other products. My old heater had a hard time getting rid of all the waste photons.
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It's stuff like this that really underscores the importance of science education.
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Maybe if it's a heat pump? Those can use a third of the power of resistance heaters, or less
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Next we'll see an "LED model" that only uses 14W to put out an equivalent 60W!
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Some heaters have a thermal reservoir (oil) that allows them to keep the temperature more stable, not so much high/low in the fluctuations. It may refer to that.
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Yes. They are very common in Europe in some regions with a lot of industry (as opposed to lots of housing) where you can heat the reservoir over night when electric power is cheap. But that one was just a resistor you could plug into a wall socket.
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My apartment managers just replaced my electric stove with a new "energy efficient" model. Seems to be actually be market-speak for "low power" since I now can't boil a pot of water without a lid
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