Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Which Sauna Heater Is Best? Carbon Or Ceramic Infrared Sauna Emitters For Best Emissivity

Thinking of buying radiant health sauna thanks to your reviews. Then came across the following regarding heaters. Is this true? Carbon/ceramic combo heaters are what I generally recommend. I lead into it after I’ve explained the benefits and drawbacks of the other two options by asking this question: what do you think would happen if you combined carbon and ceramic heaters? As you might guess (since one gets too hot at the surface and the other is too cool), that particular combo creates the most effective type of heater in the industry. By mixing carbon and ceramic, you get a more emissive heater that has a surface temperature that won’t make the air in your sauna uncomfortable. You also get a combination effect that creates the perfect wavelength for penetrating deep into tissue and driving up a body’s core temperature, causing you to sweat and giving you amazing health benefits. The emission rating of this material combination is .97, and the heater’s temperature is 200 °F, which gives us our ideal wavelength when plugged into the Wien’s Law of Displacement formula. Also, sitting near a heater with a surface temperature of 200 °F is a heck of a lot more comfortable than being near one that’s up around 400 °F. By this point, my opinion on which heater is best is clear. All things being equal, users can get a better sweat with a ceramic heater than with a carbon one, but the incredibly high temperature is just too unpleasant to be near. Carbon heaters, on the other hand, simply don’t generate a suitably high and concentrated amount of heat, which greatly reduces the potential health benefits. And neither creates the ideal wavelength of infrared. Combination carbon and ceramic heaters, on the other hand, give off the right kind and the right amount of infrared energy at a more tolerable temperature that allows users to stay in their saunas longer. This is more comfortable, and, of course, allows for more useage, which is crucial when it comes to getting health benefits like detoxification. So, yes, most every question-and-answer session I’ve done about infrared saunas over the years starts with the same questions. If I’ve done my job right, it also ends with the same result: a consumer who now completely understands that ceramic/carbon infrared heaters are the best choice for his or her body. Hi Ard, Sure it’s true, if you’ve never tried enough saunas to know that the real world difference is so minute, it would never warrant a ridiculous long winded explanation like that. When you find out less than 10% of a “combination” emitter has ceramic dust sprinkled into the mold before the carbon layers are pressed, it kinda makes you wonder if any of these people have used all the products they’re selling AT ALL. https://youtu.be/oM3cDLkNNsk

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