Why Every Van Lifer in Australia Needs a Diesel Heater
Australia's climate is extreme. The same van that bakes at 45°C in the Queensland summer sits at -5°C in the Snowy Mountains in July. A diesel heater is the most efficient, safest, and most practical heating solution for a van — it runs on the same diesel in your fuel tank, draws minimal electrical power, and heats a van interior in minutes.
Diesel Heater Options: The Honest Truth About Chinese vs German
There are two tiers of diesel heater on the Australian market:
Premium (Webasto, Espar/Eberspächer): A$1,800–3,500 installed. German engineering, 20+ year track record, dealer network in Australia, quiet operation. The standard in marine, truck, and caravan applications. If budget is not an issue, buy a Webasto Air Top 2000 STC.
Budget (Vevor, Diesel Air Heater brands): A$150–400. Chinese-manufactured units based on Eberspächer design. Work well for many users. Fail rate higher than German units, no Australian dealer network for parts. Require more careful installation and monitoring.
For most van lifers, the Chinese units offer acceptable reliability at a price point that makes sense for a build budget. The failures that occur are usually installation errors (fuel line too long, poor earthing, incorrect glow plug) rather than inherent product failures.
What to Look For in a Diesel Heater
Output rating: 2kW is sufficient for an insulated HiAce or Transit van. 5kW is overkill for a standard van but useful for a large Sprinter or poorly insulated vehicle.
Controller type: LCD controllers are standard. The better units include altitude adjustment (essential if you're visiting high-altitude areas like the Snowy Mountains or Alpine areas).
Fuel pump: The fuel pump is the most common failure point. Quality fuel pumps tick at a regular interval. An irregular tick indicates a problem.
Installation: What to Get Right
Installation errors cause most diesel heater problems. The key points:
- Fuel line length: Keep the fuel pickup tube as short as practical. Long fuel lines cause hard starting.
- Exhaust routing: Exit exhaust gases downward and away from the vehicle. Never route exhaust near the air intake.
- Intake placement: Fresh air intake should draw from outside the van, not from the interior.
- Earthing: Poor earth connection causes erratic operation. Earth directly to the chassis.
- Power: Run a dedicated fused circuit from your auxiliary battery. A 2kW heater draws 8–10A on startup, settling to 1–2A at cruise.
Running Costs
A diesel heater running on full power (2kW) burns approximately 0.2–0.25L of diesel per hour. Running overnight at medium output (8 hours), expect to use 1–1.5L. At current Australian diesel prices (~A$2.00/L), that's A$2–3 per night for a warm van. Compare this to LPG or electric heating — diesel wins clearly.
Our Recommendation
For most Australian van builds: the Vevor 2kW diesel heater provides solid performance at a price that leaves budget for better solar and electrical components. Buy from a reputable Australian seller who can support warranty claims. Follow the installation instructions carefully and join online communities to troubleshoot if needed.
If budget allows and you plan to use the heater heavily in alpine areas: the Webasto Air Top 2000 STC is a set-and-forget solution that will outlast the van.