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Electric towel rail.
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<blockquote data-quote="ProDave" data-source="post: 553669" data-attributes="member: 6969"><p>I want a simple electric towel rail for an elderly customer. Back in the day I would have just bought a "wet" towel rail, inserted plugs in all but one port, and an electric element in one of the bottom ports. Job done. Turn it on from the wall switch outside the bathroom, it heats up. customer is happy.</p><p></p><p>But now I look they all say "central heating, not suitable for electric element"</p><p></p><p>And if you look at the electric versions, you find they have an awkward little control box on the heating element at the bottom, and you have to push buttons on that to make it do something. That is exactly what the customer has and wants it removed because she cannot just turn it on from the wall switch, you have to then fiddle with the silly controller.</p><p></p><p>Common sense says to me just ignore the "not suitable for electric element" and just do it the old way.</p><p></p><p>Thoughts please?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="ProDave, post: 553669, member: 6969"] I want a simple electric towel rail for an elderly customer. Back in the day I would have just bought a "wet" towel rail, inserted plugs in all but one port, and an electric element in one of the bottom ports. Job done. Turn it on from the wall switch outside the bathroom, it heats up. customer is happy. But now I look they all say "central heating, not suitable for electric element" And if you look at the electric versions, you find they have an awkward little control box on the heating element at the bottom, and you have to push buttons on that to make it do something. That is exactly what the customer has and wants it removed because she cannot just turn it on from the wall switch, you have to then fiddle with the silly controller. Common sense says to me just ignore the "not suitable for electric element" and just do it the old way. Thoughts please? [/QUOTE]
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