From a 120 Volt supply, the Amp rating is calculated as 2,000 Watts (which is 2kW) divided by 120 Volts = 16.7 Amps.
A fan interlock relay can be used to prevent the electric heater from being energized when the fan is not running. This relay will only allow power to the heater when the fan is operating, ensuring that the heater cannot operate independently.
A 1500 watt bathroom exhaust fan heater should be connected to a 15 amp breaker to ensure proper protection against overloads. This is calculated by dividing the wattage (1500 watts) by the voltage (typically 120 volts for residential circuits) to determine the amperage (12.5 amps in this case, which you would round up to the nearest standard breaker size).
A fan heater blows air over a heating element to warm the room quickly, while a radiant heater emits infrared radiation to heat objects directly. Fan heaters are more effective for heating a room quickly, while radiant heaters provide more targeted warmth.
In the USA, at 110 volts, 1500 watts just about uses all the capacity of a 15 amp breaker, there's only 150 watts spare, look at the rating of the lamp and fan - lamp may be 40, 60, 100 watts, fan 40, 60, more? In the UK and Europe, at 230 volts, there's no problem. I give both answers because I don't know where you are.
The correct answer is; that depends entirely on the capacity of the circuit to which you will be connecting the fan. If the circuit (including switches, circuit breakers, wire size) has sufficient available capacity, connecting the larger fan will not be a problem. Otherwise, it is possible that even such a small increase in power consumption can cause problems with the wiring... depending on the circuit.
A 30 amp fuse is required.
It requires a 30 amp fuse.jd
If the fan/heater is heating as well as fanning, then the generator can't even support that alone, never mind the batteries. The generator is rated 1,000 watts, and the fan/heater wants 2 KW = 2,000 watts to fan and heat. That's 100% overload on the poor generator. The generator will complain, and the heater will be barely warm.
Check the 30 amp Blower fuse. If not that check the fan relay, if not that check the blower motor directly from a jump on the fan itself.
It's a 40 amp fuse in the fusebox under the hood, driver's side- one of the two center 40 amp fuses
The 2007 VW Jetta air conditioning and heater fan fuse will be a 20 amp fuse. The fuse can be found inside of the fuse box.
It says on the Fuse Usage Chart: 8. (25 AMP) Heater & Air Conditioner That is the only fuse that mentions the heaters and nothing mentions fans.
the fan has a high amp draw roasting the control module replace them both!!
Remove the wiring harness from the back of your 1994 Chevy heater fan motor. Remove the heater fan motor retaining bolts. Remove the fan from the front of the heater motor. Reverse the process to install the new heater fan motor.
It could be a blown 30 amp blower fuse, it could be a bad resistor pack, it could be a bad fan motor or it could be a faulty relay.
Remove the wiring harness from the back of your heater fan motor. Remove the heater fan motor retaining bolts. Remove the fan from the front of the heater motor. Reverse the process to install your new heater motor.
engine fan or heater blower fan?