So I have a significant sized wall mounted electric space heater for my master bedroom that I plug into the outlet 3 feet away, and I noticed today that when my heater was running, I just happened to look down and noticed the plug halfway out of the outlet with the prongs exposed, but still connected and the plug head was really hot to the touch. Is this why the plug was hot because it was a loose connection? I didn’t see any damage and I smelled no burning or anything, but could have I damaged the cord or the outlet? I don’t ever remember the plug getting hot before when I unplugged it after use, but it was always all the way inserted previously.
Being partial out could have caused the heating of the plug. I would replace the outlet if you’re handy. Do you have an amp draw meter you can use to check the heaters health?
Posts: 18281 | Location: South West of Fort Worth, Tx. | Registered: December 26, 2008
Yeah I think I’ll replace the outlet. I guess, when I first saw the outlet, it was a little darker in the room than I thought, as with a second look with a flashlight, I noticed this charring on the left slot with what appears to be a tiny bit of melting from the heat.
I showed some pics to a family member who is an electrical engineer and he said it’s better to install outlets with the wires around the side screws instead of hooked directly in the back. He said sometimes houses are built this way to save time and although it’s functional, it’s not as solid of a connection as using the side screws. I have no knowledge on the subject, so I take his word as Canon with electrical things. I figured I would still ask on here though to get a broader spectrum of opinions.
Mustang P-Pa, I don’t have an amp draw meter how would I use that to test the space heater? Embarrassingly I’m not electrical savvy and have not done much maintenance or testing being a homeowner to date.
Per Google's AI, 46% of all home heating fires are due to space heaters. Another site attributes 1/3 of all winter home fires to space heaters. I've known the percentages were high, but not that high.
Do you have another means of heating the bedroom. Wool blanket perhaps?
________________________________________________________ "Great danger lies in the notion that we can reason with evil." Doug Patton.
Posts: 21103 | Location: Montana | Registered: November 01, 2010
Yeah I’ve always known space heaters were iffy though I’ve been pretty on top of things until this occurrence today.
When an outlet gets like this is it always a 100% that if hypothetically one didn’t catch it it would indeed cause a bigger issue or do outlets simply stop working (when componentry is charred or compromised) as a safety precaution? Not sure if it would trip the breaker as current wasn’t overdrawn I don’t think. It was more an ignition concern.
Here's my annual warning to not burn y'all's houses down. Please don't use space heaters. Address the problem and add insulation or contact an HVAC professional.
Yes the outlet needs to be replaced. There's visible heat damage to the plastic.
Jesse
Sic Semper Tyrannis
Posts: 21371 | Location: Loudoun County, Virginia | Registered: December 27, 2014
One electric safety option is the Whisker Labs "ting" monitoring system - https://www.tingfire.com/ - our home is insured through State Farm and they provide it to us without additional charge. You plug a small unit (3"x3") and it tracks potential hazards. They claim to reduce the risk of electrical fire by 80%. It looks like it costs $99 / year to subscribe.
I'm not an electrician, just a consumer, but it looks like a good idea. State Farm clearing thinks it will save them on claims payouts.