Here's why.
1. It's a ceramic heater, supposedly the safest kind. Except for the meshed front, the unit's body has no hot parts.
2. At least four feet in length, the power chord is reasonably long.
3. The instructions provided are short, simple, and easily understood.
4. I use the unit in a 12'x15' room. It doesn't heat-up the entire room. I have to sit very close to the heater to feel it's powerful and focused heat blow. The lost stars in the rating.
5. There's only a soft whirring sound when it's working to reach up to the desired heat-setting. That's rather quiet.
6. I once deliberately had it on for eight straight hours. On "1500 Watts" and the maximum on the thermostat dial.
Other notes: A compact unit, it weighs little. There's a light that tells if the unit is plugged in. And another light to tell if the desired heat-setting has been reached. The unit's thermostat dial doesn't give a numerical temperature reading.
Regarding the previous review: It's not a design flaw. The "sliding control" on top has three settings. "Off," "750 Watts," and "1500 Watts." Perhaps the one you got is defective.I purchased two of these space heaters to heat my apartment. Immediately after signing my lease I discovered that very few things worked in the apartment. The insulation is terrible, and gauging by the failure of the stove and water heater I don't trust the shoddy looking baseboard heaters. The Holmes units heat the place great. Further when I received my electric bill for November it was only thirty some dollars which was really surprising. It cost me a hundred-some to keep the place cool in the summer. Would get 5 of 5 if not for the "estimation type" thermostat dial on top. I ended up using a marker to put small ticks on it so I could set it easily.
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