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697
4.2 out of 5 stars

Dr. Infrared Electric Heater

$87.55
$103 15% off Reference Price
Condition: New
Color: Gray
Size: DR-975
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Top positive review
51 people found this helpful
Great little unit. Way more cost-effective than gas these days. Setup is easy, but...
By Steven Milne on Reviewed in the United States on March 18, 2022
First off, this is a great little unit. It kicks off a ton of heat, and if its setup right, it's super easy to use and has some great features. The first thing to know: don't use the internal thermostat. The concept is simply flawed because it's internal and the unit generally sits high in the space it's heating. It means that no matter how high you set the temp using the internal thermostat, it will likely trigger the off way before the space is actually to temp. You NEED to buy the associated Dr. Infrared thermostat - it works great when it's setup correctly - BUT YOU HAVE TO SET IT UP RIGHT. Follow the instructions, use the red and black leads on the back of the unit and run the cables properly to the wall thermostat. Locate the wall thermostat somewhere else where it's not being directly blown on by the heater. Switch the heater to "external" thermostat using the toggle on the back and boom - you're good to go. It works like a charm and is super accurate. I have my wall thermostat set to 50 degrees F and my mercury-based thermometer I keep in the same space says 50 on the money. That automatically cycles the unit on/off as needed. Just know that you still need to use the remote to turn the unit ON once even after setting up the wall thermostat. From then on you only need to use the remote if you want to turn the unit off. When using the "wall thermostat" feature, the remote cannot be used to control the temp. I leave the unit on HIGH - that gives you the full 7000+ watt experience you came for. The thing heats up my garage in like 5-10 minute cycles even when it's in the negatives in Minnesota. It's great, super reliable. The thing I really am amazed by is how well these electric heaters compare to natural gas heaters. Not only are they literally 1/10 the cost ($200 to $300 vs $2000 - $3000 for gas), they are so much smaller and don't require me to run costly gas lines into my garage - which is especially difficult for me considering my garage is detached. I have a 70 amp sub-panel in my garage so this was literally a perfect fit. Also, last thoughts. Use the appropriate gauged wiring. I got a 40 amp double pole breaker and it works great for this. It needs 2 hots and a ground to operate correctly in HIGH - which is the best situation. Some people have noticed it kicking into low randomly even when connected properly. If this is happening, it's a known manufacturing defect with a previous version - so if you have this happening just get in contact with them and they'll send you a newer model. I did not have this issue so 5 stars for me. By far the hardest part is figuring out the wall thermostat. It's a little tough to to get the black and red leads into the back of the machine. The instructions for the wall therm also suck - but that's not the unit's fault. Overall a great machine. High output, easy to install and use, and electric so very convenient and let's face it - future proof. Everything is going to be electric in 20 years. Get ahead of the curve.
Top critical review
12 people found this helpful
Serious Design Flaws
By Sausha @ Sweet Pickins on Reviewed in the United States on February 1, 2021
We hooked up this heater with the recommended thermostat - used all the proper wires and the recommendations on install. The heater seemed to heat up the room fine and fairly quickly (it was about 40 degrees when it started and it heated it up to 60 within about 20 minutes). But, the heater wouldnt work with the thermostat. Once it reached the 60 that we set it too on the wall, it would kick off and then i would set the wall thermostat to 80 and the heater would only kick on if i pushed the power button on the remote. I cant come out and push the power button everytime the heater needs to come off. I decided maybe we have a faulty thermostat so i ordered a new one. Heater then is on and needs to heat up a 40 degree room to 60 - but the heater ran so much, it overheated and kicks itself off to cool down. Fine - but then it wont kick itself back on after cooling down. I can only get it to turn on again after overheating and cooling down by using the remote (and yes, i have it on the correct setting on the back for the wall thermostat, even adjusting that wont kick the heater on again). Totally defeats the purpose. Plus, the design is so poor, my room is only 60 degrees and the heater is going and the internal thermostat is reading 95 because its located directly underneath the heater. So this thing is always going to kick off for overheating. For some reason its not designed to turn itself back on after cooling down - how can you be expected to turn on the power with the remote everytime it does this??!! Returning...

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