I love it.
You guys have my full respect.
I'll never forget:
living 10 minutes from the ocean and on the Russian River, hearing the sea lions at night that have swam up the river from the ocean and make their calling sound.
That same Russian river, after a "winter" rain, rise more than 20' and LITERALLY lap at my door and go 3' under my home, and knowing I'm in a flood plain realize I may have to move out in the dead of night, before the water does rescind. It was actually cool experience. I knew ahead of time the flood was coming, but didn't know how bad it was going to be.
Those beautiful, tall red wood trees, dwarfing anything they stand next to.
The people, generally nice, but so many of them, all crowding in and competing for such limited spaces.
Living with 120 degree heat in Lake county, for a week straight. (I don't ever want to deal with that again).
I'm glad I moved there and had the experience, but not only would I not live there again, I would not live anywhere in a desert region.
Yes, the heater....... I would first see if the core has a light bulb base and can be unscrewed from the heater, that would make it easy to remove and either replace or work on.
I've seen similar round bodied ceramic cores with the coils on them as a unit.
My parents have always worked in the electric business and as a kid I was exposed to a number of different products. And I remember coming upon that type unit and thinking 'this is weird kind of light bulb'. lol.
Now, do they still make it? I will check.
Also, I've seen several of these round pan type heaters, some dating back to the 1940s that used those screw base heater units.
Another thing you could consider is getting a new, cheap, $15 compact heater, opening it up and removing the heater core. They are usually carefully and delicately wrapped on a mica core. You could remove that coil from the mica and install it on the ceramic core you have, OR remove the core you have and install the mica bound heater AND FAN in the shell you have, with the fan on the bottom blowing upwards
You could buy a single electric burner/stove (about $20 new, maybe $5 at a thrift store) and use the heating element as your heat source inside the heater, making some modifications to the element so that the connections are at the bottom where they will stay cool and the element would stand up-right.
Another thing would be to get the model number for a portable compact clothes dryer that runs on 120 volts (Kenmore and Whirlpool for example) and order the heating element and restring it on your ceramic base.
What ever you do, make sure the connections are at the bottom where they will stay cool. When connections are on the side or top they will wear out faster.
Good luck in rebuilding this unique and rare item.
