ᐅ Heating in the conservatory / sunroom

Created on: 2 Feb 2009 07:55
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AcidRain
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AcidRain
2 Feb 2009 07:55
Hello everyone, and good morning,

I am researching on behalf of my parents, so if any information is needed, I will provide it as soon as possible.

My parents have the question:
Is it reasonable or advisable to use a catalytic stove to heat a conservatory?

I had to first learn about how such a stove works...
What you read about it isn’t very encouraging (CO2, no direct vent, etc.).

What other alternatives are there?

Regards,
AcidRain
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Lily
2 Feb 2009 10:59
Hi,

As far as I know, with this type of heating, the size of the room matters because this heating consumes oxygen, which could be dangerous.

Make sure to find out exactly how this should be done correctly in such a small room.

Regards
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AcidRain
3 Feb 2009 08:02
Hello again and good morning,

So, the conservatory has a floor area of about ~25m² (approximately 270 sq ft) but is built in a rather elongated shape.

It will have windows and so on, but it doesn’t make much sense if the window has to stay open while heating ^^

What would be considered a conventional heating method?

[Quote=Lily]Make sure to find out exactly how this is done correctly in such a small room.[/Quote] That’s exactly what I’m trying to do here *smile*

Do you perhaps have a detailed explanation somewhere of how a catalytic heater works exactly?
(I only read a very brief summary yesterday)

Thanks in advance.
Best regards