Beautiful restoration job you did on that electric space heater. It looks much better and it works like a charm too. Good to see old appliances restored to working order, particularly when many of them are simply thrown away after they have stopped working or are simply worn out. Excellent work.
Going from your earlier to your later videos, it is a much, much more enjoyable experience without the music. Thank you for that. This is one of the top channels of its kind on UA-cam. You deserve a great following, which I am sure you will get. Thank you!
I have cleaned a fan heater for my neighbour, that had a similar style to this ~ rectangular unit, bar foot and side dial, the only difference with hers is that; the tangential fan is inverted and the air is drawn in a vent in the top of the cover, the impeller is plastic, deluxe functions ~ dial had 5 positions = high/low speed fan, high-ll/low-l heater and a thermostat. The only awkward thing with hers was how the mains lead went through the housing - into a perished grommet > a hole in the cover [not an arched slot like you had] = the wire got bent on removing the cover as to how close the strain-relief clamp was to the hole, a screw (in a slot) was loosened under the thermostat to push it into the heater so it’s wheel would clear the slot hole in the cover for removing and the dial was pulled off. I didn’t elaborately/completely dismantle it not like you did, l removed the cover and was amused with the amount of dust that had coated the inside of the chassis, I opened the bottom sash on my window and put the chassis on the outer sill recess of the house and got an electric air-bed inflater and blew the dust out with it, and was amazed at how effective it was and the dust cloud I had made. I also removed the impeller to oil it’s bearing and took apart the motor to [again] oil it’s bearings [these need to be removed > heated and pickled in oil to efficiently lubricate them] l then reassembled the fan heater and inadvertently bent-twisted the wire inside the the cover (it survived the ordeal with some chafing from the hole) and managed to straighten it out. I then tested the heater and it worked as intended
Beautiful restoration job you did on that electric space heater. It looks much better and it works like a charm too. Good to see old appliances restored to working order, particularly when many of them are simply thrown away after they have stopped working or are simply worn out. Excellent work.
Thank you for your interesting comment👍. I'm glad you liked the renovation. Regards
Going from your earlier to your later videos, it is a much, much more enjoyable experience without the music. Thank you for that. This is one of the top channels of its kind on UA-cam. You deserve a great following, which I am sure you will get. Thank you!
Thank you very much for your nice comment. Initially, I experimented a bit with video. I'm glad you appreciate my work and like my videos. Regards
Probably the best heater refurbishing video I've seen yet. You refurbished every part and that makes it tops! Thumbs Up!
I refurbish as many original parts as possible, only replaced the electrical part as the cables looked bad. I'm glad you like it. Thanks
Nice restoration, would have liked to have seen more of the cleaning processes. Very nice to see the re-use even of nuts and bolts.
Thank you, I'm glad you enjoyed it. I try to use the original parts as much as possible.
Very nice work.
Thank you very much, I'm glad you appreciate it
I have cleaned a fan heater for my neighbour, that had a similar style to this ~ rectangular unit, bar foot and side dial, the only difference with hers is that; the tangential fan is inverted and the air is drawn in a vent in the top of the cover, the impeller is plastic, deluxe functions ~ dial had 5 positions = high/low speed fan, high-ll/low-l heater and a thermostat. The only awkward thing with hers was how the mains lead went through the housing - into a perished grommet > a hole in the cover [not an arched slot like you had] = the wire got bent on removing the cover as to how close the strain-relief clamp was to the hole, a screw (in a slot) was loosened under the thermostat to push it into the heater so it’s wheel would clear the slot hole in the cover for removing and the dial was pulled off. I didn’t elaborately/completely dismantle it not like you did, l removed the cover and was amused with the amount of dust that had coated the inside of the chassis, I opened the bottom sash on my window and put the chassis on the outer sill recess of the house and got an electric air-bed inflater and blew the dust out with it, and was amazed at how effective it was and the dust cloud I had made. I also removed the impeller to oil it’s bearing and took apart the motor to [again] oil it’s bearings [these need to be removed > heated and pickled in oil to efficiently lubricate them] l then reassembled the fan heater and inadvertently bent-twisted the wire inside the the cover (it survived the ordeal with some chafing from the hole) and managed to straighten it out. I then tested the heater and it worked as intended
I congratulate you on a successful renovation and thank you for your description of the renovation, best regards.
Jesus 100c air output 🤣 lethal stuff
🤣
I love it! Is it for sale? 🙂
It's not for sale, it will be a souvenir, thank you for watching the video, Regards
Legal 🔥
Thanks🙂
Iska model kitna hai brother
I bought the Fan heater at an antique market for 5 euros