rich_kildow
Member
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2009
- Messages
- 12
I was gone teaching snowmobile safety with my daughter and checked my phone to find a series of frantic texts from my wife. Long story short, my garage heater (Dura Heat EWH9615 10k garage heater) shorted it's heating element. The heater is less than 10 years old and I blow it out every fall so it isn't heating up excessive dust from the off season. This was hard wired as specified, on a 50 amp breaker in an Eaton CH subpanel. The panel, breaker, and wiring existed when I bought the house 14 years ago, I simply upgraded the heater that was already there and an electrician connected it and popped in a new breaker.
After reviewing the camera, she closed teh back garage door to do something outside and the moment it closed, it lit up and sounded like a welder, dropping a few sparks in the process. According to her, it then started burn back in the element. After attempting a fire extinguisher briefly, she called 911 and then my parents, who live around the corner. Dad got there ahead of the first volunteer and flipped the breaker. In the less than 5 minutes that took, it had melted from about the 6 o'clock position on the first coil up to about the 12 o'clock position. The fire department did some poking around and determined the fault to be completely in the heater itself, not in the panel or wiring. A remark was made that these kinds of shorts often don't trip breakers.
So, now I'm freaked out and have some questions. I understand that **** happens and who knows what happened in that heater. Something obviously jostled just wrong and caused a short.
But why didn't the breaker trip? Off my basic understanding of electricity, I'm guessing that because a 50 amp breaker takes a lot to trip and a heating element has inherently high resistance, even shorting out and burning itself up the circuit wasn't pulling enough current long enough to cause a thermal magnetic breaker to trip...right?
I've left this heater on plenty of times when we were asleep or during a quick run to town to keep the garage up to temp to work, thaw deer, etc.
Is there a safer way to move forward? I keep trying to tell myself that this was a completely freak accident, but you only get away with so many of those before something else happens. I'm in NW WI and we're at -20 tonight, so I don't know that a mini split heat pump would be a great way to do things reliably, and they are expensive. A modine heater run off our bulk tank seems the next logical option, but that couldn't be installed until spring when we could dig up the propane line. I don't think I'm going to trust another electrical resistance heater for a while, and this wasn't some no-name Temu heater.
After reviewing the camera, she closed teh back garage door to do something outside and the moment it closed, it lit up and sounded like a welder, dropping a few sparks in the process. According to her, it then started burn back in the element. After attempting a fire extinguisher briefly, she called 911 and then my parents, who live around the corner. Dad got there ahead of the first volunteer and flipped the breaker. In the less than 5 minutes that took, it had melted from about the 6 o'clock position on the first coil up to about the 12 o'clock position. The fire department did some poking around and determined the fault to be completely in the heater itself, not in the panel or wiring. A remark was made that these kinds of shorts often don't trip breakers.
So, now I'm freaked out and have some questions. I understand that **** happens and who knows what happened in that heater. Something obviously jostled just wrong and caused a short.
But why didn't the breaker trip? Off my basic understanding of electricity, I'm guessing that because a 50 amp breaker takes a lot to trip and a heating element has inherently high resistance, even shorting out and burning itself up the circuit wasn't pulling enough current long enough to cause a thermal magnetic breaker to trip...right?
I've left this heater on plenty of times when we were asleep or during a quick run to town to keep the garage up to temp to work, thaw deer, etc.
Is there a safer way to move forward? I keep trying to tell myself that this was a completely freak accident, but you only get away with so many of those before something else happens. I'm in NW WI and we're at -20 tonight, so I don't know that a mini split heat pump would be a great way to do things reliably, and they are expensive. A modine heater run off our bulk tank seems the next logical option, but that couldn't be installed until spring when we could dig up the propane line. I don't think I'm going to trust another electrical resistance heater for a while, and this wasn't some no-name Temu heater.





