Chip - I am referring to a couple of my heaters whose adjustment knobs are the opposite of what most of us are used to. These heaters require that the knob be turned in the direction that a clock does NOT turn, which is called counter clockwise in the US and anti-clockwise in Europe.

MG

Chris Tsao wrote:
If an article or someone's post says they turned theirs "anti-
clockwise" to lower the temperature and not counter-clockwise, then
that probably means their in Europe, so if you have one from America,
so you turn it clockwise. I kept seeing the word anti-clockwise.

On Apr 18, 6:20 am, Mister Gardener <mistergarde...@email.toast.net>
wrote:
I have a couple of heaters whose controls are little rubber stumps and
require me twisting them over and over to set the temperature. When I
forget which way to turn, I just keep on going in one direction and then
the other until the light comes on. I think my Hagens with those knobs
are counter clockwise in the US, anti clockwise in other countries.

MG



Chris Tsao wrote:
For a Hagen heater, do I turn the black knob on the top clockwise or
counter-clockwise to lower it? If my memory serves, it didn't say on
the back of the blister pack it came in and I've read online people
saying to do it both ways . Thanks in advance.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -



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