When I first read this comment I was picturing a hot water radiator behind you, so it sounded unlikely based on the blackbody radiation curve for ~320 K.
But now I realize you're probably talking about an electric heater. Given that their heating elements get so hot that they're putting out visible red/orange light, it seems very plausible that an electric heater could produce enough ~940 nm IR to drown out the signal from the remote.
Thanks for sharing! I will try to keep this in mind when I'm troubleshooting IR remotes in the future.
As I try to recall, it was not typicall remote, the problem was between Nokia 6310i and IrDA transmiter, since that's how you connected phone to the PC back then. Looking at wikipedia, that IrDA was small range, probably low powered, so maybe even very low IR source in the background could create problems? IIRC problem was with the water radiator, which surprised me a lot back then. But we did use electric heaters as well at the time and my memory could be wrong.
Btw. that Nokia 6310i from 2002/3 is still used today by mother-in-law, and original battery still holds for 4-5 days!
But now I realize you're probably talking about an electric heater. Given that their heating elements get so hot that they're putting out visible red/orange light, it seems very plausible that an electric heater could produce enough ~940 nm IR to drown out the signal from the remote.
Thanks for sharing! I will try to keep this in mind when I'm troubleshooting IR remotes in the future.