No. The relay isn't rated for mains electricity.
Are you sure the built in thermostat is really as bad as you claim.
The kit in your link requires a 12 volt DC supply and would need an external relay, rated for the current of your fan heater at 240 volts but with a 12 volt coil, to control the fan heater.
So
Why not simply use a decent room thermostat.. If your power socket is suitably placed a plug in type might do the business
If you go for a room thermostat check the switching rating. You need one capable of switching 10A or more...
Reckon something like this would work through a relay to control a fan heater onboard?
The thermostat built into the heater switches off at tropical and back on again at arctic![]()
Most only switch 3A.
I'd try putting the heater on a work top first.
I've just checked, but Maplins don't do worktops plus a bigger boat to put one in![]()
They have these though...
Keep the heater stat on max, and plug it into something like this Timeguard
Cheap and safer than the Maplin thing.
It's not a matter of quality of thermostat. It's the location of the thermostat that makes the difference.Get a fan heater with a better thermostat?
Sledgehammer + Nut.
OK, a try putting it on a table then.
Nigel, Brevity is your trademark - never a wasted word. Good sense though.Most only switch 3A.
I'd try putting the heater on a work top first.
I would be careful where you put it, or else use something like a Dimplex Coldwatch.
We used to leave a fan heater with a frost setting in the kitchen of a holiday home we owned.
One weekend we arrived to find the thing had caught fire and self-destructed. Fortunately it was on a stone-flagged floor well away from anything combustible.