Basic PLUS Author |   192 Articles

Joined: October 29, 2010 United Kingdom
Was this article helpful? 0 0

Central Heating Versus Electric Towel Rails

Expert Author Anthony P Langston

With the advent of the cold weather, and chilly mornings, we are all more than aware of the problems of keeping the home cosy and warm. Now, as the recession digs its claws ever deeper, there is a necessity to keep heating bills to their lowest and obtain the best value for the money. Often homeowners look to keeping just the rooms that are being used heated and leave the spare rooms (like the spare bedroom or the study) unheated except when they are in use. But most rooms in the house are utility rooms and will be used at one time or another, and if they are not kept perpetually warm it can cause even more problems raising the temperature to an acceptable standard when needed.

The bathroom, like the kitchen, is one of those rooms which is used each day and every day, and is essential to the family functions. However it tends to be used first thing in the morning when everyone is getting ready for work and school, the intermittent bath or shower later on in the day, and then briefly for preparing for bed last thing at night. So the bathroom can be successfully warmed if the central heating is timed to go on and off correctly, allowing time for it to warm up before the morning and late night rush.

However, the humble heated towel rail which is known more for keeping your bath sheets and towels roasting hot has come into its own as a room heater as well. The amount of energy that these little gadgets generate can heat even quite a large bathroom. So you are not only warming your towels and linens, but you are also keeping your home warm at the same time, and this can work out to be much cheaper than keeping your central heating on all the time. Added to this is the fact that you will not want to keep your central heating on throughout the year.

In the summer months, it is likely you will be looking to turn your central heating off - but unfortunately in our wonderful country of vast seasonal changes, it can be bright sunshine and a cooling breeze one day, and force 10 gales with wind and sleet the next. In fact, our weather is now so unpredictable it can run a heavy cost switching the central heating on and off throughout the year.

A heated towel rail can be a handy substitute. Homeowners can choose to have both central heating and a heated bath rail in their home, but in the smaller bathroom especially, it may well perhaps be a waste of space and money. Turning an electric heated towel rail on and off at the times when it is needed throughout the year could not only prove to be easier on the budget but it is much more flexible.

Some would even say that a heated towel rail tends to look more stylish than your standard radiator. As popularity has grown, designers have taken into account that sometimes rather than being an appliance that should not be seen, they are sometimes considered a focal point. What has followed is a whole plethora of new designs in stainless steel, chrome or copper. All shapes and sizes, a rail is made to compliment the design of your bathroom with its loop styles and flat panel styles. The heated towel rail has now migrated outside of the bathroom and is now found in kitchens utility rooms and living rooms because of its overall elegance and architectural grace.

If you have no heating in your bathroom, give the heated towel rail a lot of thought. The electric heated towel rail is quite simple to install as it just plugs into the mains. However the version that is hard wires into an already existing central heating system will need a certified electrician to install.

Central Heating Towel Rails, Electric Heated Towel Rails and Designer Towel Rails.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Anthony_P_Langston