Building Supplies

วันพุธที่ 23 กุมภาพันธ์ พ.ศ. 2554

M-D Building Products 64428 18-Foot Pipe Heating Cable with Thermostat

Product Details
M-D Building Products 64428 18-Foot Pipe Heating Cable with Thermostat

M-D Building Products 64428 18-Foot Pipe Heating Cable with Thermostat
From M-D Building Products

List Price: $42.99
Price: $32.24 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
http://astore.amazon.com/building-supplies-for-sale-20

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Average customer review:

Product Description

MD Products 64428 18' Pipe Heating Cable With ThermostatMD Products 64428 18' Pipe Heating Cable With Thermostat Features:; UL and CSA approved pipe heating cable designed to prevent water line freeze up; Ready to install, grounded cord and plug, thermostat controlled, with pilot light; 18'

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #35688 in Home Improvement
  • Color: RED
  • Brand: M-D Building Products
  • Model: 64428
  • Dimensions: 1.50" h x 7.13" w x 9.63" l,

Features

  • Prevents frozen water pipes to -50°F
  • Easy to install just "wrap around" application
  • Sensor light shows thermostat is working
  • Available in 6 different lengths
  • Built in thermostat

Editorial Reviews

From the Manufacturer
UL and CSA approved electric pipe heating cable designed to prevent water line freeze up. Ready to install, grounded cord and plug, thermostat controlled, with pilot light. Recommended for use on metal and rigid plastic pipes. Exclusive Press-To-Test button test cable before installing! The built-in thermostat turns cable on at 38°F. Reliable low wattage design uses up to 70% less energy than other cables and protects to -50°F!

Customer Reviews

Keeps the ice dams from forming5
I have a 110-year-old house with a flat roof. It's a beautiful old row house in the city. The problem with a flat roof -- as everyone knows -- is a lack of drainage. In wintertime, the area around the downspout collects water during the day when the sun is out and the surface (at least) freezes when the sun goes down. That causes a back-up of water and leaking down the interior walls. NOT A GOOD THING!!! This "heater" cable keeps things just warm enough to keep the water flowing down the spout and out of the house. It has a thermostat control which means it only uses electricity when the temperature dips below a certain level.
An Important Detail Regarding the Thermostat4
I can recommend this product, but I had a problem that almost caused me to remove the heat tape with the insulation from my water line and return it, and that's not fun when it's cold outside. I wouldn't be surprised if some other people have had this problem, which is also a problem for the manufacturer and those selling the product. I assume the problem would exist with all of the other length heat tapes; they probably use this same thermostat.

After installing the heat tape and insulation, I wanted to make sure it was working OK. I could have done this by watching the pilot light when it got cold, but I decided to use the "Kill a Watt" meter that I had purchased at Amazon about a year ago. (I highly recommend that product. It's relatively cheap, about $21. You plug it into a wall socket and then plug an electic appliance into it and it tells you the volts, amps, watts, power factor, kilowatt hours, etc.) I plugged the electric heat tape into the meter and I could see when the heat tape turned on and the watts it was drawing. (It was 19 to 20 watts by the way.) For one thing, by using the meter I didn't have to go outside to see the pilot light. Actually the pilot light is underneath my mobile home.

The problem came when the temperature (where the heat tape was located) went down to a little below 30 degrees F on several occasions and the heat tape was not staying on. It was off quite a bit of the time. I wasn't anticipating that, and I thought the thermostat was probably defective. The instructions that came with the heat tape didn't prepare me for that. They mentioned some blinking for a while, but I thought the heat tape would be continuously on before the temperature dropped to 28 to 30 degrees.

I don't think the thermostat is defective, and you certainly don't need for the heat tape to be on continuously when it is something like 28 to 30 degrees, but like I said, my first thought was that the thermostat was defective. Apparently when the thermostat first kicks on and the temperature isn't quite a bit colder than 30 degrees the flow of electricity warms up the thermostat a little and it kicks off for a while again.

Fortunately I decided to monitor the heat tape for a while instead of removing it. Since then I have found that the colder it gets the more it stays on, and when it is cold enough it stays on all of the time. So far this year the temperature has dropped to 5 degree or so and I haven't had any problems with freezing water lines. Of course you have to insulate the water lines to recommended levels, remembering, for one thing, that this heat tape only uses some 19 to 20 watts. The 9 foot heat tape available in the local hardware stores uses 63 watts. I hope this note helps some people.
Gail's review5
Worked well down in the well to keep pipes from freezing in the cold...cold winter weather.

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