It could be one of many reasons... water pump, thermostat, cooling system to name a few. I had no heat in my car during a very cold spell and had the mechanics do a reverse system flush. (Whatever the heck that is.) But it seemed to work on my car.
A light bulb similar to a heater in that they both produce heat when in operation.
I would guess the thermostat I would guess the thermostat
To convert from kilowatts (kW) to British Thermal Units (BTU) per hour, multiply by 3412. Therefore, a 5kW heater would produce 5 * 3412 = 17060 BTU per hour.
I don't think so because when we have a cold, it is best to keep oneself warm and thus the heater produce heat for us to keep warm. Unless we have a lousy heater which produce cold air instead of heat, haha!
An electric heater works by passing an electric current through a high resistance wire, causing it to heat up and produce heat through a process called Joule heating. The heat is then transferred to the surrounding air through convection, warming up the space.
There are two insulated heater elements that heat the water.
No , if you were to bypass the heater core , you would have no heat
Cars produce a lot of electricity as well, both to charge the battery back up and to run the fan, lights, radio, AC, etc. An in-line electric heater would work well too, especially for electric cars that don't produce the heat that internal combustion cars do. Another reason for this would be for high-end cars that want to produce heat for the interior before the engine is fully heated. A built in ceramic heater (much like a toaster) can do this just fine.
Less Non-Renewable Natural Gas Will Be Used To Produce Heat.
might be a simple fix as adding antifreeze. sometimes when ur radiator is low enough it wont let the heat heat as much or at all.
enough.
The part that generates heat... depending if it is a gas / electric heater