- 44,000 BTUs
- Warms up to 175 Square Feet (15 foot radius)
- Safety tilt shut off valve
- Height: 87-Inches
- Stainless Steel Burner and Heating Grid
Product FeaturesColor: Copper
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Product Details
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
66 of 66 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Nice for the price.,
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59 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Works, but watch for rust on SS model...,
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Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Garden Sun Floor Standing 41,000 BTU Propane Powered Patio Heater With Push Button Ignition (Lawn & Patio)
Found this heater on [...], bought it with free 2-day Amazon Prime shipping, and put it together yesterday. Easy as pie! Another reviewer said that despite the sand in the base that his GardenSun blew over and dented the reflector, so I bought 4 long bolts to replace the ones that shipped with it, and put the bolts all the way through the wooden deck and secured it underneath. Now it's solid like a rock, who wants to move theirs around anyway? Starting the pilot light the first time can be a bit tricky, read the included instructions & you'll be fine.
EDIT---- I've had the heater for <6 months, now very, incredibly, amazingly rust covered. It looks pretty seriously unattractive. Discussed with neighbors and is apparently due to low quality stainless steel and exposure to salt coastal air. Push button igniter dead, but pilot lights easily with long-stem lighter from BBQ. Does not use a lot of gas
26 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Entertaining assembly process, decent heater,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
I'd recommend going into the assembly process in a good mood, so you can get a laugh out of the somewhat chaotic and sketchy assembly instructions. If you go in short tempered you'll probably be miserable. I'm pretty sure the parts in the box didn't match up with the list of parts I was supposed to have, which in turn didn't match up with the parts referenced in the instruction steps. But the parts I had did all go together properly with nothing left over (expect the third foot mentioned below). It seemed like perhaps the engineering of the heater was an evolving process and the instructions hadn't kept pace.
A couple of examples... The heater came with three little feet (presumably to make it more tip resistant) and a set of roller wheels. Neither was mentioned in the instructions. The holes where the roller wheels bolt on overlap where one of the three feet bolt on, so I guess you have to choose between three feet or two feet and wheels. I went with the wheels, which do make moving the heater fairly easy as long as you have the room to tilt it over. Also, the main instruction sheet just showed a single piece top reflector. But the reflector actually came in four pieces with its own separate assembly card. Anyway, it wasn't all that hard to figure out where the parts went and get the thing together. I wheeled it outside, hooked up a propane bottle and it fired right up. Mine lights in just a few seconds (one of the other reviewers mentioned theirs takes 45 seconds or so). It doesn't bake you with heat (which I suppose is good for the propane bill), but does provide a nice gentle warming to take the edge off on a cool night. 2115|R16CD6S57HLRYU;2115|R2N62CEQMBJEM5;2115|R3H1K5JF8ZUTZZ;
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