MD Building Products 4325 Cavo scaldante per tubi MD 0, 6 Ft L 6Ft

Brand:M-D Building Products

3.5/5

43.48

Questo cavo scaldante per tubo da 6 piedi MD Building Products con termostato è approvato UL e CSA e progettato per prevenire il congelamento della linea dell'acqua. Pronto per l'installazione, cavo e spina con messa a terra, termostato controllato, con spia luminosa. Consigliato per l'uso su tubi in metallo e plastica rigida. Esclusivo cavo di test del pulsante Press-To-Test prima dell'installazione! Il termostato integrato accende il cavo a 38 gradi F. Il design affidabile a basso wattaggio utilizza fino al 70% di energia in meno rispetto ad altri cavi e protegge fino a -50 gradi F! Avvolgere non è necessario.

Termostato integrato. Disponibile in 6 diverse lunghezze. La spia del sensore indica che il termostato funziona. Facile da installare basta avvolgere l'applicazione. Previene i tubi dell'acqua congelati a -50 gradi Fahrenheit. Questo prodotto è fabbricato in Cina. Destinazione d'uso per impianti idraulici grezzi, tubi-cavi riscaldanti. Questo articolo è un cavo scaldante M-D Building Products 4325 da 6 piedi con termostato.
Backlight ‎No
Batteries Included? ‎No
Batteries Required? ‎No
Brand M-D Building Products
Brand ‎M-D Building Products
Control Type ‎Button Control
Customer Reviews 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 509 ratings 4.4 out of 5 stars
Included Components Electrical & Heating;Cord & Power Management;electrical-cables
Included Components ‎Electrical & Heating;Cord & Power Management;electrical-cables
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer ‎No
Item Dimensions LxWxH 8.25 x 4.75 x 8.75 inches
Item Dimensions LxWxH ‎8.25 x 4.75 x 8.75 inches
Item model number ‎4325
Item Package Quantity ‎1
Item Weight 0.59 Pounds
Item Weight ‎0.59 Pounds
Item Weight ‎9.4 ounces
Manufacturer ‎M-D Building Products
Material ‎Metal
Model Name 4325
Model Name ‎4325
Number of Items ‎1
Part Number ‎04325
Product Dimensions ‎8.25 x 4.75 x 8.75 inches
Size ‎6Ft
Type of Bulb ‎LED
Voltage ‎120 Volts
Wattage ‎12.00

3.5

7 Review
5 Star
70
4 Star
15
3 Star
9
2 Star
2
1 Star
4

Scrivi la tua recensione

La tua mail non sarà pubblicata. Tutti i campi obbligatori sono segnati con*

Scritto da: Karl T. Kemp
An Important Detail Regarding the Thermostat
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.
Scritto da: Pontificating Nobody
Plug light indicates power, not heat..
So far so good. I have only had this installed for a few weeks, but wanted to post since I think they may be either shipping cables that are slightly different or maybe they have switched to a newer model. In reading the reviews some reviews report that the lighted plug is on all the time and some report that the light comes on when the cable is actually heating. On the cable I received this year (2016) the light is ALWAYS on and seems only to indicate that the circuit is complete and the cable has power. In order to test my cable I held a bag of ice against the thermostat and was able to hear it kick on and get warm. I'd recommend doing this test before you install it to make sure you didn't receive a dud cable. It's much easier to test before installing rather than finding out you have a problem later and having to rip it out and return it. I plan to test it at least annually by icing the thermostat. UPDATE - it has been a year since I purchased and installed this cable. Before winter set in I climbed back in my crawlspace and removed the zipties that I used to mount the thermostat so I could test it with a bag of ice. Sure enough, once it got cool enough I heard a slight audible click and the cable warmed up. I reinstalled the thermostat with zipties and climbed back out. I'll do it again every year but so far so good. UPDATE - just did my annual test (11/2020) and my cable is still working flawlessly. That being said, my cable is exactly like the one pictured here (orange on plug side, heat shrink tubing on a T shaped thermostat, black cable on the heating side). I have read reviews and seen online that they are now selling a purple flat cable type of heat cable and I have no experience with that one.
Scritto da: The Jim
Here is information you need to order this tape
I bought this product to keep the water hose coming into my RV from freezing. We are full-time RVers and spent this last winter at a place where it got cold enough to freeze the water hose coming into the RV. I know that this product is not recommended for this, but it worked for us. What we only found out after the got the product is the following: What length tape do you need. I could not find this information anywhere so here it is: For 1/2 inch copper pipe 30 inch cable for 22 to 27 inches of pipe 24 inch cable for 16 to 22 inches of pipe 18 inch cable for 13 to 16 inches of pipe 13 inch cable for 8 to 12 inches of pipe 9 inch cable for 6 to 8 inches of pipe 6 inch cable for 3 to 6 inches of pipe 3 inch cable for 2 to 3 inches of pipe For 1/2 inch metal or plastic or 3/4 inch copper pipe 30 inch cable for 20 to 26 inches of pipe 24 inch cable for 16 to 21 inches of pipe 18 inch cable for 12 to 16 inches of pipe 13 inch cable for 8 to 11 inches of pipe 9 inch cable for 5 to 8 inches of pipe 6 inch cable for 3 to 5 inches of pipe 3 inch cable for 2 to 3 inches of pipe For 3/4 inch metal or plastic or 1 inch copper pipe 30 inch cable for 18 to 25 inches of pipe 24 inch cable for 15 to 20 inches of pipe 18 inch cable for 11 to 15 inches of pipe 13 inch cable for 8 to 11 inches of pipe 9 inch cable for 5 to 8 inches of pipe 6 inch cable for 3 to 5 inches of pipe 3 inch cable for 2 to 3 inches of pipe Also, be aware that you do have to put fiberglass insulation wrap on top of the tape.
Scritto da: MaryC
Has managed to prevent pipes from freezing at my cottage over the winter
Easy to install
Scritto da: Bradley L.
Nice product!
Works perfect!
Scritto da: Régis Pelletier
Five Stars
good
Scritto da: Amazon Customer
Received broken item
The media could not be loaded.

Prodotti correlati

hot
hot
hot

Scopri il nostro network internazionale

Spediamo in 28 paesi, oltre 200.000 prodotti. Resta aggiornato, iscriviti alla newsletter.

Shopping Cart