Amish Heat Surge Miracle Heater Scam

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I saw a two-page ad in the Rocky Mountain News this week about some new miracle heater called the ‘Amish Heat Surge‘ and it fell into the category of things that sounded to me to be ‘just a little fishy’. Later I saw a commercial for the same product. Sure enough, after doing some calculations, I figured out that this is just a scam to overcharge people for a cheap electric heater made in China. Searching the Internet, I found a few unhappy customers who fell for it. Even though the heaters are ‘free’, you pay $298 for the ‘Amish authentic wood mantles’ that enclose them. In reality, there’s no reason to wrap an electric heater with a wooden box or mantle. It also has some sort of fake fire effect. Oh, and shipping costs $50 EACH. And they’ll stick you with an extended warranty for $28 each. So for around $770, you’d get a pair of heaters that do the same thing as a pair of $27 electric heaters you can pick up at Wal-Mart.

A 5,119 BTU/hr heater generates about 1/20th the heat produced by a household furnace. It will draw 1.5 kW. For every hour this thing runs, it will cost about $.15 in electricity, which doesn’t sound like a lot, but over a 730 hour month, that adds up to an extra $108 on your electric bill. Electric resistive heat is the most expensive way to heat a house. It costs about twice as much per BTU as natural gas heat. Just to put it in another perspective, a 2,100 sq. ft. house in my home state of Colorado uses about 6 therms of natural gas a day in the coldest winter months. At the current gas price of $1.20 per therm, a typical gas bill is $216/month during the winter months. To heat your house to the same temperature with this electric heater, you’d need to have 5 of these heaters operating at the high setting 24 hours a day. The additional monthly charges on your electric bill for just the heaters would be $540!

This heater can be yours for only $385

This heater produces the same amount of heat and costs $27 at Walmart

The ad talks about only using it to heat zones, which can save on your heating bill, of course, but only at the expense of having some of the rooms in your home being uncomfortably chilly. And you can’t really completely turn off your central furnace without the risk of pipes freezing. In other words, if you put a heater like this in the room that has your furnace’s thermostat, and thus your furnace never comes on, you may freeze pipes in a remote part of the house.

The ad is full of high pressure sales nonsense, such as requiring a special savings code that expires in 48 hours, or you’d otherwise pay $587 each! There is a limit of 2 per household and they need to ‘turn away dealers’ because they can’t keep up with demand.

If you’re one of the people reading this article who bought an Amish Heat Surge heater, please note that I mean no disrespect to you. I’m just tired of con artists using slick advertising to suck people into buying things that aren’t worth a fraction of the sales price.

233 thoughts on “Amish Heat Surge Miracle Heater Scam

  1. I agree with some of what is being said.. I have seen Amish made furniture before, and this is obviously not, and of course uses electricity, so will cost you to use. I have had one for about two yrs now, and all the electric components work fine. I like the “fake fire” effect, especially with pets around. I don’t believe it was worth the amount of money paid, but generally speaking, it’s a good product. I appreciate knowing how much it really costs to run as well!

  2. Saw infomercial on this pos this morning…
    first and foremost if anything it would be Mennonite made… not Amish… Mennonites use electricity and power tools and whatnot… Amish will never be on tv by choice, they don’t mass produce anything, everything they make is by hand not using power tools…
    my stepmother was raises by the Amish… I was neighbors with Amish for 17 years… if I were to show any of my Amish friends this ad, they would be outraged!

  3. Shame on Sears Roebuck, which now sells this scam product! In our newspaper today (11/27/11), the magazine section (USA Weekend)included an ad from Heat Surge, alleging that “Sears hit a home run with the first-ever low-cost appliance with Hybrid-Thermic heat technology, which no other heater can claim.” With puffery typical of its ads, the Heat Surge hucksters report that this “Miracle Heater…caused such a frenzy at Sears stores with none in stock, one customer refused to leave, forcing managers to hand over the floor model.” The output of this Heat Surge unit is described as “Ortho-Thermic bone-soothing heat.”

    Despite all this hoopla, the fact remains that the Heat Surge heater is an electric resistance heater that, at maximum, puts out 1500 watts of heating power, the same as many perfectly good heaters that can be bought for much, much less. In its 2011 Buying Guide, Consumer Reports listed the heat Surge as the lowest-rated of the fan-forced convection heaters it rated. Heat Surge had a score of 42 as compared with ratings of from 58 to 78 for the other four models in its classification, all of which were much cheaper, except for the Eden Pure model, another scam product, endorsed by the late Paul Harvey and by Bob Vila,who has sold his soul to Eden Pure by shilling for their overpriced product.

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