Really good info there, thanks. There seems to be a connector for a temperature-sensors, which implies that it indeed would have a thermostat. Can you verify this?
You have probably good sources for this heater? Especially with the rubel where it's at right now? Can you tell the price?
You will also need a silencer of some sort on the exhaust, as well as a through-hull for that as well.
The air pipes beeing to short is the case with all heaters as far as I know. No nozzles either with most heaters.
edit: according to this manual (
http://en.autoterm.ru/materials/sh/318 ) it has a ventilation mode as well.
http://en.autoterm.ru/download/Heater_C ... .2015).pdf
What's really nice is that one can put the heater in min-power mode, thus having it on 10 W all night instead of starting and stopping all the time.
It looks smarter than the webasto when the cabin temp-sensors fails as well. The webasto runs at full tilt, whereas this one will drop to mid-power.
In case of open-circuit failure of the cabin temperature sensor (during
operation), the heater will go to medium-power level.
The modem they are quoting in the text is a GSM-modem that costs around 90-120¤. There's even a smartphone app for it.
The planar is said to be min 10 W, whereas the ST2000 14 W.
Really good info there, thanks. There seems to be a connector for a temperature-sensors, which implies that it indeed would have a thermostat. Can you verify this?
You have probably good sources for this heater? Especially with the rubel where it's at right now? Can you tell the price?
You will also need a silencer of some sort on the exhaust, as well as a through-hull for that as well.
The air pipes beeing to short is the case with all heaters as far as I know. No nozzles either with most heaters.
edit: according to this manual ( http://en.autoterm.ru/materials/sh/318 ) it has a ventilation mode as well.
http://en.autoterm.ru/download/Heater_Controls_for_Planar_ENG_(14.12.2015).pdf
What's really nice is that one can put the heater in min-power mode, thus having it on 10 W all night instead of starting and stopping all the time.
It looks smarter than the webasto when the cabin temp-sensors fails as well. The webasto runs at full tilt, whereas this one will drop to mid-power. [quote]In case of open-circuit failure of the cabin temperature sensor (during
operation), the heater will go to medium-power level.[/quote]
The modem they are quoting in the text is a GSM-modem that costs around 90-120¤. There's even a smartphone app for it.
The planar is said to be min 10 W, whereas the ST2000 14 W.