Are Space Heaters Safe?
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- Опубліковано 6 лют 2025
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This is probably the best advertisement a company could do, give their product to the caveman and let him beat it with a rock and see how long it last
😂
I'm in tears 😂
I bet they sell a bunch of them because the caveman did a great job at beating the rocks:)
😂 comedy
UNGA-BUNGA! MUNKY FLING POO! MUNKY CLUB MACHINE! 🤪
The fact that a company WANTS you to test their product, makes me wanna buy the product, because if they want you to test it, they must be pretty sure, they have a great product 😂
I have one, it's excellent!
Well if i need a space heater i now know which one to get. Its brave to let Tyler test your products. But THIS makes me wanna buy the product more than any annoying ad would.
Also recommended by Project Farms.
@@drhoxar5508 The best kind of ad, everyone benefits from the test!:)
@@Mario_Gillette Looks like they are tough for sure!!
Tyler touching running electrical appliances submerged in water is the most Tyler thing ever.
The complete disregard for safety, the uncontrolled use of extremely flammable chemicals, the handling of water-submerged electrical appliances
This is truly a great video
this is what peak entertainment really is
I love how casually he does all of it, like its a everyday situation 😂
@@ruanulisses6650 clearly he's testing it to see if it can survive daily life in his household 😂
I haven't been recommended his videos in a long time so the algorithm truly does work
@@manitoba-op4jx I don't think the test is to see if the appliances can survive, I think the real test is to see if he himself can survive.
I always run several space heaters in my bathroom. Right in between my toaster collection and welding station.
I do have one in my bathroom. Its a small one standing below my sink. If you are not a splashing toddler its safe :D
I love a smart ass.😂😂😂 Good one 😂😂
You dont even keep your diesel heater in there? Heathen.
@@Gkitchens1 DIESEL!? i prefer to use ecofriendly coal-fired heaters.
@@jonathanl8970
I burn my own trash in the fireplace.
this is how you know a company is CONFIDENT confident with their product. Willingly letting Tylertube do whatever he wants to it to test it
You said confident twice!
_Should have frozen them in a block of ice, then plugged them in!_
Do not give this man ideas (definitely keep up the good ideas) legally speaking, what I said in the parenthesis is purely a quote from an unknown person that I happened to overhear while at a concert in Norway.
Nice pfp @@seraph1969
I like this idea
I wanna see this test now 😂😅
11:21 The multimeter probes show the difference of voltage across two points. One probe needs to be in the water, and one probe needs to be on a grounding point.
I said the same thing. That could have been really bad because he didn't understand the test equipment. I cringed when he touched what appears to be a metal chassis.
@@ceefusjenkins2281 I'm assuming it's plastic, especially since metal is more thermally conductive and would probably get hot being on a space heater.
100% correct! No path for current to flow (like when in a plastic container) means no voltage gradient to be measured with a meter.
Well... So long as you don't put the probes right up to the unit, there'll be some current flowing from active to neutral within the unit itself.
@@charmiothe current is flowing from live to neutral, and if ground is attached to the case, that's where the current should flow
But yeah i wouldn't touch anything when in water lol
@@cjdelphi Very true, however that one is double insulated, i.e no ground connection. The reason I think that is because the RCD didn't trip, and also all my space heaters are the same.
14:30 The reason it doesn't light is because Gasoline has a much higher ignition temperature than most people know. The highest you showed these heaters getting to was about 250f (about 115C), while the auto-ignition temp for Gasoline is a staggering 536F (280C) meaning that this element isn't even remotely hot enough to auto-ignite it.
The real danger comes from something with a much lower auto-ignition temperature combusting and starting a chain reaction, which would flash burn all of the gasoline vapors and make a huge pop of fire.
Honestly, you can pour about any accelerant on one of these heaters, and they would be nowhere near hot enough to ignite. Even Kerosene, which is known for having a very low ignition temperature, is still about double what you measured at roughly 428F (220C)
Nitpicky comment: 220°C is not the double of 110°C. That would be 493°C. You have to do the calculation in Kelvin.
@@robdidopp7769 You know what, this is completely fair. I'm not the most first when it comes to using Kelvin or Celsius, and that was a complete oversight on my part
I should say in general that the temperature is nowhere near hot enough for ignition, not a specific metric by which it's off
Good info here ty
@@SytanOfficialbro watch, diy biotech, Nike red, Cody’s lab, and diy biotech if ur nerd like me this vid brainrot😂
Also there’s def a lot of thinks you could put in there to make it boom
Lol gasoline on a space heater. Tyler is our favorite childhood friend.
Is your handle Alice In Chains inspired?
Lucky he did not self-immolate.
In the 80s, my brother had a friend like that. He sprayed my Tonka trucks with Off insect repellent and set them on fire. They made them out of metal back then, but they were coated with carbonized paint and probably were toxic to play with after that.
@@robertgaines-tulsa literally cancer chemical central
Well, gasoline is flammable, not inflammable, so spraying it on a space heater is one of the safer stupid things you can do with it. Note, I said safe-ER not safe. But it was actually less dangerous than the aerosol flamethrower he did later in the video.
i'll be keeping this in mind the next time i think about taking a bath with a space heater
Exfoliating!
Yep. 0/10
Next time!? When was the last time!?
Free hot tub
Live laugh toaster bath
This confirms that Tyler is actually a 12 year old whose parents mistakenly thought he could be trusted at home alone.
did someone say "home alone"?
The thing I love about Tyler is that he's all of the "One time in highschool this dude..." stories rolled into one person.
You know a company is 100% confident in their product, when they're like "yeah so, we are gonna give them to a guy who likes to kill things or set them alight, just cos we wanna see an extreme test that we can't think of, but also know chances are, it won't fail" 😂😂
There is always something to be said about a company who is not scared to have their products destroyed to show what they can handle and take. More companies like this please.
Tyler is absolutely mental in this one, dude dropping that thing in water without any fear and still touching it, then sprays gasoline on the heater, madman. I love this guy!
When Tyler says don’t do this at home, you know it’s about to go down… 😂😂😂
As someone who messes around in a small shed with small engines sometimes and a spaces heater that won't light gas or starter fluid is actually comforting
please note that gasoline has a higher ignition temp than the space heater can reach, and therefore wont ignite (285C with the max of this product showing 115ish C)
other chemical gasses / fuels light at a much lower temperature than gasoline and will cause it to ignite. These space heaters can likely run hotter if they are ran for a longer period of time.
Oh I'm so glad that Tyler uploaded this video right now. I was JUST about to get into the bathtub filled with gasoline and DREO heaters. 😂
I wish this video came out yesterday……
@@Hellcat71782 Mannnnnn, i'm quite literally dead right now 💀
Gotta go with the trusty ol toaster I guess 🤷♂️
@@presley913 The hairdryer 💀
The water caused the power drain to go down because it lowered the resistance in the elements. Basically the heat dissipation from the water negates what the water adds as well as the amount of resistance in the water itself.
If you allowed the water to heat the resistance would increase, but at that point your house would probably be burning down as you're also increasing resistance on the wires in the wall
Unless there's some igbt or other current limiter inline with the elements, lower resistance would indulge more current per voltage meaning higher power at the outlet. Nichrome, assuming that's what the elements are made of, is really only vacuosly tempco positive. Like maybe something like +1% resistance per +100°c
NERD!!!
@@Bobwehada_Babyitsaboy Shut up
Lower resistance =more power.
It cooled the elements down at first, lowering the resistance(that’s why the draw went up), but then once it started boiling, the steam acted as an insulating layer, causing the heating element to get hotter and the resistance to increase, which is why the power draw decreased.
Any flow brought the water is minimal unless it was saturated with electrolytes.
@@ElectroTree01 press x to doubt.jpeg. its more likely that there are 3 equal elements in parallel for high medium and low settings. The water took one out of circuit, maybe by shorting a relay, causing the circuits impedance to rise by roughly 30%
PTC or, to most people, ceramic heaters have to be the safest form of space heater regardless of tip protection over heat sensors, etc. As they are an eliment encased in ceramic with a massive heatsink. They are also self temperature regulating as the temperature goes up, and the current goes down cause the resistance is too high to heat. This means that as you noticed with the blanket test, it generally won't burn anything. Its also part of the reason the wattage went down when you put it in the drink, the top part got too hot so dropped the total wattage or the internal temp of the ptc got too hot.
I bought a DREO heater last year for use at work. Probably the best heater I've ever owned! I have the little $33 dollar one and it more than enough to heat my 13×13 living room. DREO is my goto brand for space heaters. In fact I'm looking now at the wall mounted one for my bedroom!
By the way, I like how DREO used your video on heaters last year as an ad here on youtube!
Watching the tests go from reasonable tests to “when will this even ever happen?!” is totally on brand
"You can even light them on fire."
That's the same as telling an alcoholic. "Please guard this bottle of whiskey for me. You can even take a sip."
It's more like giving a child your credit card and telling them you can spend as much as you want.
Child=Tyler
Credit card=heater
Money spent=flames
@@ZT_1234 its EVEN MORE like giving TylerTube a space heater and telling him he can even light it on fire. Damn near 100% like that if im mathing correctly.
@@ZT_1234 That's what the Apple and Google app stores do. And they love to give out $8K bills.
21:59 Oh i surely enjoyed it Tyler. Watching you have fun with heaters and seeing if they catch fire 🔥 is always fun. I remember in the past, we used to have an old space heater that had those red heating bars and i saw a heart in the bars (my mom thought it was cute), but I remember when I was little, I got up because I had to pee, but I kept staring at the heater, thinking it was going to burn me or something. To this day, I'm still sometimes wary of them and recently when our boiler got turned off because it needed to be fixed, and the air conditioner didn't work, we were freezing 🥶 and me and my mom used our heaters at the same time (in different rooms, and forgot that our room outlets connect to the same electrical system) and my heater made the power go out twice.
I remember camping out in my friend's driveway in my station wagon, in the dead of winter in southwest Missouri back in the 1990s. Was I homeless? Yes by definition, because I didn't have a home. But No, because I had Friends. Her mom let me run a space heater out to my Plymouth Reliant station wagon, and I jammed it in between the fabric front seats while I slept in the back. It was a steel box with a tungsten coil behind its fan, and it pushed the heat in the direction of the fan while the rest of the structure kept cool. Any time the coil was energized, the fan was also en force. The walls were never warm.
I have a Really Bad Allergy to cigarette smoke, so I couldn't crash on her couch. But that little space heater kept me warm during the whole winter. I couldn't have asked for better friends than those two, Lagina Kay and her mother Martha. She even let me take a shower a couple times a week so I could keep my job at the local computer store!
Kay? I Hope that Life is Good For You. I'm Still thinking of you and Chance.
My favorite bits was where he runs the heater to see how hot he can make it in his office. Where his computer is. Because you always want your computer to be as hot as possible.
And squirting a confined stream of water directly on the hot filaments was my second favorite. Don't know why he didn't stick a fork in there.
I truly can't decide if Tyler's the best person to test product safety, or the worst, lol. And I guess that keeps me watching.
Yeah the water bath was hard to watch 😂
But he meausured the voltage with both probes in the water, so it was safe 🤣
@@damustermann bro i couldent hold back my laughing
@@damustermannis it not supposed to be both probes? 💀💀 I’ve never used a volt meter
@@fezcarstuff5851 It's pretty simple, it measures from positive to negative. If you hold up both probes to positive, or negative, you can't measure anything because there is no flow of voltage. Voltage and current flow from positive towards negative, that's why you have to measure the same way.
@@fezcarstuff5851 definitely not. I already commented on this but I'll paste the comment here as well.
You need to test two different points to measure voltage, so you'd have to put one probe in the water and the other probe on ground or neutral. Both probes in the water will show you 0 volts just like both probes on a live 120V wire will show you 0 volts, because there is no difference in potential energy between the probes, which is what voltage is, a difference in electrical potential energy.
Basically, what a volt meter measures is how much of a difference in electrical energy there is between two points. Measuring voltage with both probes on a single point, in this case they're both in the water, will always show you 0 volts, because there is no difference in electrical energy since the water is acting as one single conductor.
For a second, I thought he said Doritos were making heaters…
XXtra Flamin Hot Nacho
LMAO it sounds like it doesn't it
I also thought this
Doritos actually burn quite well. (don't ask how I know)
Imagine the smell
Not sure if the wall mounted heater still working after being lit on fire is necessarily a good thing, you’d think it overheats and shuts off in case it was causing the fire. Also, pls test the blanket again but don’t cover it and let it overheat, a very likely scenario is the corner of the blanket just slightly dangling in front of it, I feel like that won’t cause it to overheat and might actually start a fire. Otherwise very proud of the company for having this much pride in their product, like others said.
heater company is having a good day
Wait until his home insurance company sees this being done inside 😬😬😬😅😅
I would LOVE to see a cross-over tour with Tyler and the US Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC). He's basically doing what they do, but in public view. 😂
Good to know i can warm my bath water with my space heater. Thanks Tyler!
HA!
You know a lot of morons will be doing that Stupid Stunt If Tyler can do so can i
You think that is neat? Wait until you learn about the toaster trick! (This is, legally and literally speaking, a dark humor joke)
Ive been doing this for weeks now!
i reckon an actual water heater is much more efficient. plus, nothing wrong with going wim hof every once in a while.
“Maybe it’s overheated. Let’s hit it again with flame.” I can truly say that works😂😂
That was thee most dangerously informative video I've seen from Tyler thus far. Definitely wanting to buy that wall heater now!
Hi Tyler, I'm not sure if anybody else already explained it to you (I am no expert by any means) but from my simple understanding of how electricity works, I think I can explain why the wattage decreased when you put the space heater in the tub of water.
Basically, the wattage isn't changing, however, and like you mentioned in the video, the water increases the resistance on the wattage, which is why its reading decreases. The space heater isn't smart enough to increase the wattage output to account for the increased resistance from the water. The reason it spiked initially when you put the space heater in the tub is because you were still holding the heater, which was providing that increased output from the water. Once the heater was down far enough in the water, even if you kept holding it, the resistance from the water is still too great to overcome, thus causing the decrease in wattage output.
My apologies if that got too wordy, but hopefully that helps explain what happened there!
I can’t be the only one that wanted him to touch the water to see if it was still hot🤣🤣🤣
My current space heater stopped working so I’ve been looking for a replacement and the confidence this company has in their product speaks volumes. Safe to say I’ll try them out
MythBusters, Tyler Edition: What happens when you throw a toaster in the bathtub?
Who's going with it?
DUHH... IT GOES FROM RAW WATER TO TOASTED WATER. IT'S NOT ROCKET SCIENTRY OR ANYTHING. LOL !
Why do we measure heater/ac room capacity in SQUARE feet? Rooms are cubes not flat squares. If you are heating or cooling a 10x10 room it makes a pretty massive difference if your ceiling is 8 foot or 12 foot high.
Most of the time I was like "don't do it Tyler". But honestly, the fact they wanted him to test them and how well they did means if I need a space heater I'm definitely going to look at this brand.
15:11 that could have gone really bad holding a bottle of gasoline expecting it to catch on fire 🤣🤣
Gas doesn't burn only the fumes burn..
@Yo-Da-Action so go sit by a puddle of gasoline with a trail of it leading right to you and splash a bottle of gas on something you are trying to see if it will catch on fire with your face right in the line of fire
@Yo-Da-Action I understand reading is hard but I was saying he was expecting it to catch on fire and he's got is face right under a trail of gasoline on the ground splashing gasoline at something he is eexpecting to catch on fire, and yes. A bottle of gasoline could certainly go up in a ball of fire in the right conditions
@@Yo-Da-Actiontechnically since he was spraying it with a spray bottle of all things, he was aerosolizing it, and so the gasoline itself would've combusted along with the fumes from the gasoline. Which is why it is probably one of the most wreckless things I've seen him or anyone really do with gasoline, besides the fact that it could also trail back to the spray bottle if it did combust and and then literally would've caused an explosion. But yes gasoline itself can catch on fire and not just the fumes.
@@xyenthereptilian7451 thats BS.
liquid gasoline itself can't combust. it's the fumes and nothing else.
why would gas engines start really hard at -40°C ?
because it evaporates pretty bad at that temperature and without fumes no bang in the cylinders.
same goes for diesel engines and engineers putting gridheaters in the intake to heat up the intake air. so the diesel can evaporate better from the hot intake air.
19:24 My internet armchair safety inspector brain is telling me that this was a very close one. If the flame went back inside the can it would have exploded and not been pretty
What a neat company. Faith in products is rare these days.
20:20 At least you know that when you're house is on fire, the heater will keep it warm until the firefighters arrive.
17:26 just watching the flame slowly creep up then back down is terrifying😂
16:28 "I don't want to cause an explosion"
Us: That's exactly what we want to see happen!
Bros worried about a explosion. Then 5 seconds later proceeds to light a compressed flammable gas on fire as it's coming out of the can lmao
In computer programming we want our programs to fail fast as soon as a bug appears, not keep running which could compromise the integrity of the whole system. Thus I'm not sure a burnt space heater still on, drawing electricity and working is such a good idea, I would pretty much prefer it just shorting and turning itself off at the first sign of trouble.
In contrast to what the comments or this overall video would lead you to believe, buying a space heater or any high powered electronic not designed to operate under water that continues to operate under water, is NOT a good thing.
I literally just bought that smaller dreo (the 1 in the water ) and it works great.
It's 15 degrees outside tonight and it's heating my 250 sqft living room up nicely.
That's a company that understands UA-cam videos lol
i think the heater has a strict limiter, when you put in in water, it went over 1600w then immediately went down below 1200w, it probably just limits its power so it doesnt reach to far above 1500
A heater in the bathroom is the dumbest yet honest thing you can test
I have one🥴 these minnesota winters are brutal
You like sitting on a frozen toilet seat?
@@michaelmullis9502Get your insulation redone you shouldn’t need another heater besides the one built into your house
Anytime Tyler starts a video saying the test is going to be looking at performance and safety, you know it’s gonna be a good one. 🤣
It's 30F outside and I still use a fan in high to sleep. Imagine needing a heater pshhh 😂
I just open my window all winter, fans are too noisy :p
Water: “I MUST BREAK YOU”
Heater: “Hi, we’re going to be friends”
You know, there's one aspect to these heaters catching fire I wonder could be a factor to test. Dust! New heaters won't have accumulated much dust on the grill and heaters to burn off when covered. Or block certain fans to regulate as they warm up. I wonder if these are affected at all by that.
I love my ceramic LASKO space heaters. Got one for my room and one for work. Gets to 102 F after 10 seconds, and around a max of 260 F after that. I've accidentally forgotten to turn it off at night , quite a few times, when I'm laying in bed and had the whole room go up to about 93 F before it did an auto-shutoff and I woke up drenched in sweat... lmao..
9:54 -- This isn't testing... This is just abuse... Why don't you just go throw it in the bath tub while you're at it?
..oh jesus... you actually did.... You, sir, have a death wish....
Company: “you can light our heaters on fire”
Tyler: “aight bet”
I bought a Dreo heater last week and I've been thoroughly impressed with it. It's a larger version of the rectangular heater you tested.
That wall mounted ine is pretty slick looking....im saying this before he starts the test. I'd absolutely put one of those in my bathroom, up high, cause during the winter I don't use my ac or anything, I live in Texas and it rarely gets cold enough for it.....but I absolutely hate cold toilet seats and getting out of a hot shower into freezing cold air.
Let's hold the unit with our bare hands while spraying with water. The best part about Tyler is how he tests things the same way a 12 year old would.
11:23 could be wrong here, but the negative terminal should be connected to ground, not also in the water. Voltage is always relative to whatever ground you have. Putting both terminals in the water just measures the voltage difference between the same source
No point in connecting them it wouldn't achieve much. The metal body will be grounded so I'm the water it's likely flowing to ground but because of no RCD it doesn't trip. This is one of the reasons you have a separate ground as the GFCI or RCD would trip as some current would be going to ground. Also if you lose your grounding and neutral the case could become live hence why they are separate.
@@HA05GERhe’s not saying to connect the nodes he’s saying to actually test for potential current you need one node on something that is actually grounded doesn’t matter about the residual reading just the fact that one node is grounded and the other is on or in this case in the water to test if there is a potential difference in the two
Yeah, pretty much. What Tyler did is not going to tell you much of anything, even if there are live wires/parts in the water
I was about to comment on this. He does need to connect one of the probes to ground lol
19:52 You can see John Wick in the left Corner of the front plate
Tyler discovered a new water heater 😂😂
"Maybe it's just overheated... let's hit it again" 😄
Tip: If your RTX 4080 Ti is consuming too much power and your electricity bill is starting to get expensive, put half of your computer in the bathtub.
What probably killed the heater at 7:40 is excess leakage current from the heater to the housing getting to the electronics through sensor wires.
If you wanted to measure "water voltage" properly at 11:30, you should have measured from water to a known-good ground. That would have told you how many volts were waiting to shock you. Voltage between two points of water in a container only tells you the voltage gradient between those two points, not particularly useful for anything unless you need a water voltage divider.
Heater power goes down in water probably because the heater uses a series PTC stack for temperature regulation and temperature/resistance of the dry part shoots through the roof when the fan gets stalled by water drag.
This collab is pure gold!
Really would have loved to see how well it heats in frigid temps, rather than how long it works while on fire. Alas, it was very entertaining!
Lowkey Tyler is the best content creature like EVER.
"Gasoline has a relatively high autoignition temperature, typically around 495°F (257°C). This is the temperature at which gasoline will ignite without an open flame or spark. Most space heaters, even when operating at their hottest, do not reach the surface temperatures necessary to autoignite gasoline."
Yes. Let's place our hands on the 1,500W electronic device while spraying & dunking it in water. LOL
You’ll get better performance on that green screen if you smooth it out. It helps keep the green tones consistent.
Take a shot every time Tyler says "it's literally melting"
If you had kited the heater over when it was full of gasoline, then it might have burst into flames as the tip over switch contacts "if exposed inside the unit" spark when they open up. But if they used a enclosed tip switch then nothing would happen. Older heaters all had exposed tip over switch contacts, but maybe the new units have sealed tip over switches.
11:23 @ElectroBOOM smacking his forehead while Tyler checks the voltage of the water with both probes in the water, not one in the water and the other connected to a solid ground. We love you Tyler
On one hand: yes, he could not expect to measure correct results, but on the other, unless he put the probes just right, he would have seen some voltage if 110V were connected to the water. It's AC, so in spite of the plastic box surrounding the water there should be some current flowing back and forth and as long as the distance between wherever the voltage comes from and each probe isn't exactly the same, this should lead to some difference in potential.
@@robdidopp7769 There would be no voltage flowing back and forth. That's not how that works - you need a ground. All you are seeing when you are getting really low mV readings in the air or in water is that the two probes are not exactly identical. It could be age/corrosion, slight differences in manufacturing etc but the probes are not getting *exactly* the same data. You can measure conductivity of water with a multimeter and conductivity probes (if it has a conductivity setting) but not standard probes or with a resistance setting.
@@robdidopp7769the probes are measuring a voltage difference between the 2 probes. If they’re both measuring the same thing you should have 0, or very close to 0. Most meters aren’t going to display the voltage fluctuations of an AC circuit.
@@jkoll42 not quite true, but I'll admit that I did overestimate the likely capacitance of the system by a lot. The outer surface of the water and whatever is conductive in the heater does form a tiny capacitor. Something in the lower nF range is what I get for a cylindrical capacitor of this approximate size filled with water. This results in a current flow, which, in turn, results in a voltage difference between points at different radial positions. In this case, the voltage could be around 10-50 microvolts. Measurable, but not with a cheap multimeter that's held by hand, with the wires moving through the earth's magnetic field.
...and if we assume that the system will behave more like a uniform conductor, i.e. if there's simply a charge accumulation at the outer edges, the capacitance will be lower, the voltage probably slightly below 1µV.
I’d say you definitely tested these.
I didn’t see the same tests on all of the products.
When you submerge it, the current(and since same voltage, power goes up) goes up as the water cools down the heating element, decreasing its resistance, allowing more through. Unless you had a lot of electrolyte in the water, I’d assume the current from the water itself would be less than a watt. The reason why it went down I have to assume is the steam(heating element boiling the water). Since steam is so much less dense than water, as the water vaporizes, the steam pushes the water away, resulting in nothing conducting heat away from the element, which causes it to get hotter and therefore increase its resistance, decreasing the current flow(and power).
The heater was likely below the auto ignition temperature of the flammable liquids. However, a stoichiometric propane flame is like 2500 Fahrenheit iirc, which is enough to cause the ignition of the liquids.
I had a steam vaporizer that basically sent electricity through the water. If you didn't add a pinch of salt, it would pull so little current it wouldn't make steam.
I know it's not but.....
I sure hope those are plugged into a GFCI outlet
Doesn't look like it😂
@chazmichaelmichaels88 The container of water he dumped it into wasn't grounded, so it wouldn't trip even if there was ground leakage detection.
@@charmio if the space heater is grounded it would absolutely work
probably would've tripped instantly if they were
GFCIs protect all outlets on the same circuit, so it not being plugged into one can't rule out fault protection.
Space heaters are VASTLY different today than they used to be, safety regulations are worlds better. Gotta admit seeing that one run submerged though shocked me.
The ones with exposed glowing elements and no safeties were hella dangerous.
12:55 When you put it in, the heating element cools down rapidly. The cooler the element, the less resistance it has (based off the law of thermal impedance/resistance). The hotter the heating element gets, the more electrical resistance it has due to the excitement of atoms in the material impeding the flow of electrons. Water can strip away far more heat than the air can, thus lowering the resistance and decreasing the load on the power draw
I was thinking thee same thing the hotter the element gets the more it draws cooling the element is essentially the same as cutting the temp down
These are ptc heaters yes, but lower resistance=more amps. As to why the power was decreasing I'm not sure. My only explanation is there are mosfets in there limiting the current.
You fried the tower when you sprayed water into the back. It's not clear the the fire had anything to do with it breaking.
This was mildly entertaining, but it would have been more entertaining if you took them apart, especially the small unit. The small floor unit survived being dunked in water. Taking it apart would have revealed why it's so tough.
The temperature of those heaters was around 250+ degrees. The ignition temperature of gas is more than double that (530F). Of course the gas isn't going to ignite.
Perfect 72° degrees 👍🔥🔥🔥🔥
Fun fact. Fuel doesn't ignite. The fumes do. I imagine the fumes are being blown away while the liquid is being left behind. Ergo no ignition. Also gasoline has a ignition temp point at around 495 f. So the heating elements would need to reach atleast that.
Ahahahahaa! Bless you Tyler! You made my day with the dunk test!! ❤
People on here talking about the flash point of gasoline. The reality is if it would have shorted one thing and caused an arc, he would have been standing in a middle of a fireball with all the fumes he had going on. I love his content but that one had me screaming at the television.
Locks bathroom door and pulls out my Secret Tylertube Decoder Ring: Be sure..to buy..a DREO.. A crummy commercial? I came out from watching this video, a little sad but a little wiser. Still though, nice job on the presentation and the company for making a fine product!
Just added the Wall Mounted Heater to my Amazon cart.
Damn this collab is crazy 🔥
I can't believe you just suggested that it would be fine to use a space heater in a bathroom! 😂😂😅
How do you still have homeowner's insurance?
That wall mounted heater is $99. With a 2 ½ year warranty. Get it now before they realize they should be triple that.
I am watching him on youtube tv spraying gasoline on a space heater. Had to stop, get on my phone to scream, “idiot! STOP! Back up!”
Tyler: "I'm gonna make it catch on fire."
DREO: "I bet you can't."
😂😂😂
Anybody else see the face of a man on the bottom left of the heater at around the 19:45 mark?
Anybody that this was going to be Tyler’s last video? 🤦🏻
touches the thing thats had fire shot at it to the point of melting.
ooh that's hot
Your work on this really shows!
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