I have a white plug-in upright convector heater. The other day I plugged it in- there are 3 lights you can have on controlling the temperature. One light just shows it's on, two means heat, three means more heat. I twisted the dial and got lights one and three, walked away, and immediately my smoke alarm went off!! Scary- so it must have started to smoke. I unplugged it and have been too scared to plug it in since as I live alone. Any idea what I should do? I usually have it so the first two lights are on, so not sure why only lights one and three came on!
There could be dust on the element that started to burn when you put it on, that sometimes happens if it has been a while since the heater was last used.
Scarlett my friend ............. I think I can only say that it has gone to the great Heating system in the sky ........
It is an ex-heater
It has gone to sing in the choir invisibule
It is no more.
Actually, Eddie's quite right. It does happen, but with enough smoke to set off an alarm, I don't think it's worth the expense of having someone take it apart to look at it.
Hahah oh no! So do I plug it in and see if I can make it work, or do I risk going up in smoke with it? Could it really just be dust? It does look quite dusty?!
Basicaly you have two choices, scarlett, have it checked out (which may not be cheap and could result in needing to buy a new one) or puting that money to a repacement and knowing you are not going up in smoke. Personally, I would never risk trying to use that type of heater if it's not working properly.
See what I would do if I was brave enough is plug it in and see if it starts the alarm off again. If it is just dust, I may be sitting here freezing for nothing. But I am worried about starting a fire!
Our smoke alarm goes off if we burn a slice of toast. Even opening the oven door when it is hot can set our alarm off.
Scarlett I would take the heater outside and turn it on to see if it smokes (use an extension lead) if it does then see if it stops after a minute or so.
I would have expected a fault in the heater to trip your consumer unit before it did any damage. The consumer unit is what we used to call a fuse box but it has 'trips' not fuses
I think advice from EDDIE51 is on the right track.
If you have a trip switch consumer unit you should be safe enough in switching on the heater to see what happens. If there is a fault on the heater, it will cut out immediately.
Have you a neighbour who might know about such things and could have a look at it. ?