Why would an electric space radiator exact a battery-operated toy 4 foot away to sound the horn when the electric fire shuts stale?

We recently bought an electric space kiln that is controlled by room heat. When it reaches the desired warmth, it shuts itself off. We soon notice that each time it does this very soon, we hear 2 beeps. After extensive investigation, we found it be one of our children's toys is the thing that's beep.

The heater plugs into the wall, but the toy is freestyle operated. They are going on for 4 feet away from respectively other and the batteries within the toy have be nearly dead for slightly some time. The toy doesn't randomly blare and there's no question that it's due to the heating system turning off.

Why contained by the world would this occur and, more importantly, is it a sign that here is something wrong with the electrical system contained by the house?


Answers:    It's called radio interference.

When the boiler stops it is producing a large, brief, pulse of electromagnetic and/or electrostatic vitality. The toy is apparently sensitive to this.

It's not that unusual.

If it's like most heaters there's a simple bi-metal strip that you adjust tautness against to set temperature. The space heater just toggles on and past its sell-by date when a switch contact opens and closes. At the moment such a switch open or closes there is a brief moment of electrical arcing. Arcing creates deeply of radio energy.

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