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890°
Posted 25 February 2024

GoveeLife Electric Heater, Low Energy 80° Oscillating PTC Ceramic Heater with Thermostat, HEATER, with voucher - GoveeLife UK Direct FBA

£30.99£59.9948% off
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  • Energy-saving Heater: The ECO mode (Auto mode), which suppresses unnecessary power consumption due to overheating, saves electricity bills with the energy saving function. The heater can control the temperature through the APP, reduce unnecessary electricity, and make life more environmentally friendly.
  • Control Remotely via App: Turn on the space heater, even when away from home, so you'll always return to a warm space. Dual use of Bluetooth and Wi-Fi makes network distribution easier and faster. Compatible with Alexa, Google Assistant, and IFTTT.
  • 2s Fast Heating & 4 Modes: The electric heater can quickly heat up within 2s. Space heater adopts 4 heating modes:1500W high heat, 1000W Medium heat, 700W low heat and auto mode, energy-saving auto mode help you stay warm and reduce energy consumption, cut down on heating costs, you can switch different modes to suit different seasons and temperature needs.
  • Safety Protection: Our energy efficient heaters is constructed with high quality ABS flame-retardant material, and has the function of overheat protection and tip-over protection. The heater for home will automatically shut down after dumping or overheating to ensure the safe use when sleeping, working or watching TV.
  • Portable Heater: This electric heater includes 80° oscillation, soft heat, timer, safety lock, Do Not Disturb, 6ft power cord. Use the integrated handle can transport the small and stylish heater anywhere, such as a room, living room, office. Note: Screwdriver not included.
  • Supported Govee/GoveeLife Thermo-Hygrometer Models: The following models are compatible with the Govee/GoveeLife Thermo-Hygrometer: H5075, H5179, H5100, H5074, H5174, H5102, H5051, H5052, H5071, H5072, H5101, H5177, and B5178.
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Community Updates
Edited by MrSwitch, 8 March 2024
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206 Comments

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's avatar
  1. Wanio_123's avatar
    Oil or this one?
    andiron87's avatar
    All cost the same to use.
    Really depends what you want to achieve - quickly heat small room - get ceramic. Oil is better for longer heating, less noisy, keeps the heat for some time after - so good if you want to avoid more expensive hours, but also takes longer to warm up.
    Also safety needs to be considered, ceramic heater pushes heat forward, if you leave a shoe in front it may cause fire hazard, oil radiator gets really hot so if you have a toddler running around it may be quite dangerous. Oil radiators takes more space but last longer.

    No single answer to everybody 👎
  2. LadyEleanor's avatar
    All electric heaters that says low energy are marketing con.

    I guess 500 watt ones could say low heat low energy and keep a semblance of respectability
    andiron87's avatar
    Best to buy a broken one, literally costs zero to run
  3. Atess's avatar
    İs this helpful for bill ?
    _g_'s avatar
    It's exactly as expensive as every other basic electric heater to run - which is pretty expensive.
    Some benefit from the thermostat/app that lets you control it better, but ideally I'd use an external theromstat - which you may be able to do with smart other devices.
  4. reckoning's avatar
    I don't have this exact model but..

    1000w x 15p-20p (Octopus Tracker) = <£1 to heat my office for 7-8 hrs. I'd consider that stupidly good.

    Yes it's not on all 7-8hrs because it'll reach 21c and turn off, as most do.

    Putting my heating on would be 4-5x that. (edited)
    HellRazer's avatar
    Terrible comparison, your heating isn't zoned for your office ONLY. If you got something that enabled you to heat your office only eg. Tado TRV, it's much cheaper just putting the heating on.
  5. lordwc's avatar
    Got one of these not impressed
    shopkeeper's avatar
    What in particular did you not like about it?
  6. bmehboob's avatar
    based on my experience wouldnt recommend. had quite a few problems with this, typically it would keep forgetting the timer settings and my network.

    eventually gave up and returned it.

    also didnt find it that effective at heating my living room (the basic convector heaters tend to be much better)
  7. LadyEleanor's avatar
    Or buy the £10 one in Amazon (£13 if you want ceramic).
    ThE Russell Hobbs oscillating ceramic is £20. (edited)
    PsychoSonny's avatar
    None of which have scheduling. Auto switch off with a thermostat.

    It's like saying you can buy a mobile phone for £20 don't buy one one for £1000. Well it's missing all the features I need or want.
  8. jeromegrant's avatar
    Have two of these, they’re decent for emergencies or heating one room instead of whole house
    MattMac's avatar
    For most people using the gas central heating to heat the entire house would be cheaper than using this to heat one room.
  9. Nick_Rider's avatar
    Same comments come up all the time. If cost is your concern stick with Gas central heating. Gas unit cost is a fraction of electricity. If all you want to do is heat a single room quickly or a location that hasn't got central heating, for short periods then electric heaters are the way to go.

    Even more cost effective options are log burners.

    I don't think smart heaters are that useful. Certainly not to justify the price difference between dumb versions. You could achieve the same thing with a smart socket but with options on what you want to plug in when you don't need a heater.
    SamRobertshaw's avatar
    I think this is quite a narrow-minded comment regarding the smart features. I've had this heater for a few months now and think the smart features are well worth the relatively low-cost upgrade from a standard ceramic heater. The device has it's own themostat in which can shut-off or reduce heating levels when achieving a certain temperature - if you don't trust the internal one you can link it up to a separate smart hygrometer and keep your room at constant temperature.
  10. AJ321's avatar
    Just what I needed as we’re heading out of the winter and into warmer months
    Chris_James's avatar
    that's why you're getting a deal...
  11. hybridbunny's avatar
    For anyone wondering, using this at its maximum 1500w would cost roughly 40 pence per hour (going by my own 27p per 1kWh cost)
  12. Rimi's avatar
    This is complete crap; you barely heat up even smallest room with this on full power on. Yes, you will feel the heat when close to it and it is on, but that is it, unfortunately. Switch it off and after 5 minutes your room will be cold as there was no heating at all. Money to the bin for item and electricity too...
  13. BustyB293's avatar
    These are junk and not low energy 
  14. cbflazaro's avatar
    The "u can heat just 1 room" argument

    Considering gas is 4 times cheaper to heat than any non heatpump electric heater. For the same cost you can heat 4 rooms with gas than this heats with 1.

    Simply shut the radiators from the rooms you don't want to heat.
    Tibzor's avatar
    Unfortunately can't agree with this statement. As per few other comments on this and other threads, central heating boilers are not 1 or 2 kW but more like 18/24. So just looking at price of kWh is missing big point of usage per such device.
    They are less efficient as well so no, it doesn't work like that.

    I have compared 3 ways of heating my house over last 3 winters. 1st year heating most rooms with central heating. 2nd year heating with central heating only rooms in use (drayton smart heating which was closing radiators in rooms i was not in). 3rd year now I am using central heating for 20 minutes in the morning to heat whole house, 20 minutes to do same in the evening and electric heater during day in my home office during work. Result in kWh used which then translates to cost is best this year so far. Ie in January itself I've used 430 kWh less gas than last year, and 62 kWh more of electricity. Gas would have to be 7+ times cheaper to end up with similar cost.

    When I had my anual boiler service I've asked a guy how does more common cycles impact life span of a boiler as I've told him that when heating only one room last year I've noticed that is is more often for boiler to cycle - he said that it is like with most devices and it will end its life faster and will need replacing or fixing sooner.

    So to compare few thousand £ price of changing boiler faster than in recommended and designed type of use(central heating - whole house) vs getting another electric heater for fraction of such cost once it will break - I am staying with what I am doing now unless there will be different ratio of gas vs electricity.

    Obviously - each house and situation is different. But I wouldn't just put such statement like you as it is not true for everyone and it is not taking everything into consideration. (edited)
  15. 1616french's avatar
    Won't these cost a fortune to heat??
    White_Powder's avatar
    only if used
  16. Rone's avatar
    52271394-AUbmK.jpg
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    MrSwitch's avatar
    Author
    52271402-m67ny.jpg
  17. UKScottDeals's avatar
    "low energy" electric heater. Anyone who buys this is a thermodynamics failure.
    HellRazer's avatar
    The same folks that think turning up a thermostat makes a room heat faster.
  18. monkeez's avatar
    'low energy' marketing con...1500w is 1500w no matter what
    ayeworld's avatar
    The low setting is 500w. So relatively low.
  19. phantomx's avatar
    A lot of negative reviews it doesn't heat up. It's not energy saving costs 12-15p an hour to run on low setting. Makes terrible clicking sounds is noisy. The casing melts. It smells which doesn't go with time.other than that a good heater. (edited)
  20. HS77's avatar
    Bought 2 thanks
  21. stec77's avatar
    Pre voucher price now £89.99, taking it to £64.99 after £25 voucher claimed! Maybe needs expiring?
  22. rapid85's avatar
    'energy saving'.

    Got to love the marketing
  23. aviva's avatar
    Nothing low energy about this - burned a hole in our wallets with the high consumption!
  24. deathwishdave's avatar
    Is this the one that everyone is calling "the Tesla of electric heaters" ?
  25. teddybeers's avatar
    Unbelievable how fast our population is getting stupid.

    Low energy electric heater is on the same level as waterless water, non slip oil grease

    Low energy = underpowered rubbish.

    1500W as half what most of the cheapest heaters produce (edited)
  26. bilbo's avatar
    Got a delongi dragon 4 …… would the govee heater be more efficient?
    EngineRom's avatar
    I have a few of these Delonghi Dragon 4 and absolutely rate them far better than any other electric heater I have ever owned. Safer and just function beautifully without any problems
  27. Scoutfinch's avatar
    That's a great price. I got one last year, supposedly £99, and got a £40 reduction, so paid £59. It's a great little heater. (edited)
  28. tascheman's avatar
    I have one of these, bought a few weeks ago for £40.

    Integrates well with my Govee hygrometers and controllable through the app.

    Tempted to get another at this price.
    _g_'s avatar
    Can you set it to use the room temp from hygrometer within their app?
  29. Crom's avatar
    Great price but usually comments about the efficiency of these
    turkey's avatar
    Ohh they are very efficient, 99.9% of electric energy converted to heat the same as pretty much any heater.

    Actual efficiency or at least less wasted energy comes from things like more advanced thermostat, open window detection etc.
    Basically something that when set to 20 degrees dials back before and does not overshoot 20 as that's heat your paying for you did not ask for.

    No idea how this performs in that regard.
  30. ahsanul.hoque's avatar
    type in desk mini heater, bought mine for £25 and its 500w , keeps the room warm at a decent 22 degrees
  31. MarsA7X's avatar
    🔥🔥
  32. mancmackem's avatar
    I sent mine back. Had to be right in front of it to feel any benefit and it stank the room out. Didn't get any better after a few hours use.
    ayeworld's avatar
    The smell eventually goes though
  33. SPLE22's avatar
    It melts, no thanks
  34. cmoi's avatar
    I have one of those, it's noisy but I like being able to make it run at full power when the octopus price is negative and based on temperature when it's cheap.
  35. maxtesti's avatar
    I've been using one of these to keep warm while sitting on the desk or lying in bed. I keep it at about one to two meters away. I don't know how much elec. uses but it's pretty good.
    amazon.co.uk/dp/…ils
    cldox's avatar
    It uses either 600W or 1200W. Multiply by the number of hours you run it for to get kWh, then multiply by your unit rate to get cost
  36. Wishmaster4's avatar
    What do people think of log burners/stoves? Are they worth investing in one?
    stevecameron's avatar
    Certainly for the aesthetic and lifestyle appeal. However if you’re having to buy in wood it’s probably not cheaper than your central heating. If you can source free wood then it’s a decent investment.
  37. cbflazaro's avatar
    All electric heaters are 99% efficient.

    If you have gas heating usa that instead as its substantially cheaper than this.

    If you don't have gas, get an aircon or heatpump instead
    Filippchris's avatar
    Thinking the same for last 2 years but £2000+ for an air con+fit is ridiculous when the air con costs £500-800...
  38. SJ01's avatar
    BARGAIN
  39. RoosterNo1's avatar
    A wise traveller once said...

    'Yer Cannae change the laws of physics"

    Montgomery Scott.
  40. adamdavies1qb's avatar
    Rubbish vote cold people.
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