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What You Need To Calculate Before Buying A New Radiator

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You may not know this, but did you know that buying a new radiator requires a radiator calculator?

What Is A Radiator Calculator?

A radiator calculator is basically a program that allows you to determine just what kind of radiator you need to make sure that your room is neither too hot nor too cold when the radiator is running. We'll discuss how exactly a radiator calculator does this later on. For now, let's talk about…

Why You Need A Radiator Calculator

Do you know how radiators work? They are actually rather simple and work on the scientific principles of heat transfer (also known as "conduction") and convection (which is the phenomena that determines air movement within a body of air, that is, cold air sinks and warm air rises).

Radiators are basically a system of exposed pipes that can be connected to pre-installed piping that is in turn connected to a boiler. When turned on, hot water or water vapor is taken from the boiler and pumped through the pipes. Conduction then occurs, wherein the hot fluid transfers a significant amount of its heat to the relatively cooler pipes. These pipes, in turn, heat the surrounding air. Finally, to make sure that the entire room gets heated, radiators are installed in the ground, so that when the air is heated, it rises up naturally, and a fresh batch of cold air is sucked into the radiator.

As you can see, radiators are rather simple devices that do not adjust to changing conditions. They have a fixed output (measured in British thermal units and/or Watts), and so can easily provide too much or too little heating.

This is what radiator calculators are designed to prevent. A radiator calculator will do this by keeping you from buying the wrong kind of radiator for your room.

What A Radiator Calculator Factors In

There are many things that affect just how vulnerable a particular room is to outside air temperatures. For examples, imagine a one-room cottage. It has four external walls, meaning that is surrounded on all four sides by outside air. Now compare this to an apartment, which probably has only one external wall and three internal walls separating it from other indoor areas (two other apartments and the hall). Which one is more insulated from the cold? Obviously, the apartment is.

A radiator calculator will consider this, and other factors such as room size (volume, not floor space), wall thickness, building materials used, and floor material, among others. All you have to do is input whatever information it asks you about your room (try to be as precise and accurate as possible), and you can sit back, relax and let it do the rest of the work for you.

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