Skirting board heating purports to save lots of energy for the house owner, by minimising your time and effort used by a boiler or heat source to accomplish maximum temperature for a heat. While this is broadly true, the claim should be examined in more detail to find out just how much energy the system can save.
The skirting board system was created with slender flow and return pipes, which require less water to fill therefore less power to heat. Glock Accessories that a skirting heating system demands less of the boiler or heat source is therefore true.
However, the distance or quantity of active heating in this technique may be greater than the combined heated section of a traditional radiator system. So as the boiler or heat source is technically worked less hard to attain the desired temperature, it may work for longer to push heat out to a larger overall area.
This upsurge in directly heated area is probably the big selling points for a skirting board radiator system. By heating more elements of a room directly (that's, with heat emanating from a proximate source rather than dissipating from the hot radiator at another end of the room), the skirting system is potentially with the capacity of delivering a more even room heat and working at a lesser temperature than its radiator-based equivalent.
Needless to say the heated skirting system is effectively a radiator system too - just in miniature. So rather than concentrating all of the heating power into one solid unit, which is required to kick that heat through the whole cubic section of the space it is likely to heat, the skirting board version spreads it out.