
We built the 3D flame electric heater to be a straight-swap heat source for industrial machines—the kind that need serious heat in a tiny footprint. It’s electric infrared, not a burner, and it was designed to hold a steady temperature even when space is tight.
Power, voltage, and size—kept practical
It runs on 400V and puts out 2500W in a 300mm tube. That kind of power density is why your machine heats up fast. But it also means the wiring has to be right. You wire it into a 400V circuit with proper fusing. If the wiring is too small, it will run hot—so we don’t cut corners there. The 300mm length? That was chosen to drop into standard heating zones without forcing you to rework the whole machine layout.
Inside the design: built to stay steady
Inside, it’s a halogen-filled quartz envelope. The halogen cycle helps keep the filament stable, so output stays consistent over time—and it’s tougher when you’re heating up, cooling down, and heating up again. The quartz tube handles high operating temperatures and resists thermal shock. The tube is also coated to keep infrared efficiency strong and to protect against environmental contamination. And the R7s connector? It does the job: carries the current, locks in place, and makes the whole lamp a simple, drop-in replacement.
Where it shines—and what to watch for
This setup is right at home wherever you need quick, focused heat—plastic processing equipment and similar industrial uses, for example. The compact size, high heat density, and straightforward R7s termination mean you can swap the heater and get the machine back online without a hassle. One thing to keep in mind: packing 2500W into a short envelope means the surrounding parts will feel the ambient heat. So plan your cooling and shielding accordingly.