I’m trying to practice heating my body, not the whole room. The main problem is cold fingers when using a keyboard. Fingerless gloves are insufficient. So I figured a heat lamp would be ideal for this. And it turns out it’s been done.

I’m nixing that particular device though because the light is not red (thus not good for late night usage). It’s also only sold online and I will only buy local. The linked Beurer heat lamp is a “medical device” intended for humans. It looked suitable for my purpose – then I saw there is a timer with max 15 min. What is that about? Is that for safety or for convenience?

I can imagine 15 min being enough for pain relief but my use case requires keeping my hands warm for hours. Pet stores sell 150 watt IR heat lamps for reptiles just as a standard bulb, thus would go into a desk lamp without a short time limit.

The linked device is 300 watt. That’s good but it has no intensity control. A normal light dimmer on the A/C line would solve that. But I wonder:

  • is long-term exposure to IR heat harmful?
  • if not, should I be avoiding medical devices and looking in pet shops or restaurant supply shops for IR heat lamps, to avoid the timers?
  • are there IR lamps for medical purposes that have longer timers?

Bit nutty… or it could work if the mouse is not needed much→ http://i.stack.imgur.com/bbE42.jpg

  • The Bard in Green@lemmy.starlightkel.xyz
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    4 days ago

    A reptile heat lamp would probably work great, and you would be supporting a local business. The timers are probably so that if anyone burns themselves, overheats or starts a fire through human stupidity and then sues the manufacturer, they have a safety feature they can point to.

    My wife has chronic illnesses and struggles with temperature control. All the heating products we buy for her have stupid timers on them and she fricken hates them.