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Deciding Between a Fire Pit and Patio Heater? Ninja's Fireside360 Is Both

Patio heaters offer targeted heat while fire pits give ambient warmth and the charm of dancing flames. Ninja's new mashup combines the best of both.

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Written by  David Watsky
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David Watsky Managing Editor / Home and Kitchen
David lives in Brooklyn where he's spent more than a decade covering all things edible, including meal kit services, food subscriptions, kitchen tools and cooking tips. David earned his BA from Northeastern and has toiled in nearly every aspect of the food business, including as a line cook in Rhode Island where he once made a steak sandwich for Lamar Odom. Right now he's likely somewhere stress-testing a blender or tinkering with a toaster. Anything with sesame is his all-time favorite food this week.
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Ninja Fireside360

Pros

  • Combines elements of a fire pit and patio heater
  • Flames were completely smokeless
  • Easy to set up and operate
  • Light enough to move around the yard

Cons

  • The dials were a tad clunky
  • Cover is not included

Spring's arrival means it's finally time to tiptoe outside. While warm days abound, evenings remain chilly, but a reliable patio heater or roaring fire pit can help extend your al fresco hangs. 

If you're looking for outdoor warmth during the shoulder season and trying to decide between the two, Ninja's $500 Fireside360 offers the best of both. The unique warmer is a patio heater-fire pit mashup offering targeted heat around the sides with a firepit center to add undeniable ambiance to your porch or patio at dusk.

firepit ignited on patio

The Ninja Fireside360 isn't an ordinary outdoor heater. 

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In an impatient bid to turn April and May into true outdoor months, I hauled in the novel Ninja heater to see how much the Fireside could warm a few friends and me on chilly evenings. 

Here's what I thought after a few weeks with the Fireside360.

Set up and use

A person turning Ninja fire pit on.

Setting it up took less than 10 minutes.

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The unit itself weighs about 40 pounds, so it was easy for me to move around the yard without help. Set up was as easy as it gets. All that's needed is to remove the porcelain lava rocks, drop them into the fire pit center, attach a standard propane tank as you would for a grill, and you're ready to fire up this patio warmer. 

The igniter worked as promised after holding it down for a few seconds, and the flame was adjustable, although I didn't feel I could control it with the precision the advertising suggests.

Fireside open with propane tank inside

It hooks up to a propane tank just like a standard grill.

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How it works: Use as a patio heater, fire pit (or both)

The Fireside360 allows you to choose from three operating modes: a powerful outdoor heater (heat only), a smokeless fire pit (flame only) or both at once -- all controlled by two dials.

Ninja fireside fire pit shot from above

The Fireside360 combines the calming glow of a fire pit with the directed heat of a patio heater.

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It was a chilly evening, with temperatures dropping to about 40 degrees at one point, when some friends and I tested the Fireside360. We ended up using both heating modes and were able to sit around it comfortably for hours. When either just the side heater or the fire pit was at full blast, there was a noticeable drop in heat output. On a milder evening, using only one of the two heat sources might suffice.

The side heater wraps all the way around the unit, providing 360-degree warmth. While perhaps not as rustic or charming as a fire pit, the burners provided more targeted warmth than a traditional low-set fire that shoots its heat mostly up. 

Ninja Fireside side burners ignited on patio

The Fireside delivers 360-degree warmth with no smoke to battle.

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The smokeless firepit was indeed smokeless, allowing us to get as close to it as we needed without any air-quality worries or the risk of smoky clothes. On the occasions when the wind kicked up, we noticed a slight reduction in heat output.

Ninja Fireside360 vs. a traditional patio heater

fire pit shot from above

The lava rocks encouraged flames to dance about inside the raised pit.

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The key difference between a standard tower patio heater and the 360 comes down to vibes. Both types provide good warmth, but the Ninja version has an open-flame fire pit center, which is nice to look at, crowd around and warm your hands over on a chilly evening. The ceramic stones give the flame a natural look, even though it's powered by a propane tank below

It's lower to the ground and thus, less imposing than a tower heater. It also sends heat output from a lower place. Because heat famously rises, it stands to reason that more of the fire's heat is delivered to target zones, so less of it wastefully drifts up above the humans gathered around it and into the atmosphere.

How much does the Fireside 360 cost? Is it worth it?

ninja fireside glamour shot

At $500, the Fireside360 is on par with other name-brand patio heaters and fire pits we've tested.

Ninja

The combo patio heater and fire pit is listed for $499.99 at most online retailers, including Ninja's own site.

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What I liked most about the Fireside360 was the directed warmth. Fire pits send a lot of their heat up, so it's necessary to crowd around, almost over the fire, to feel its full effects. The Fireside provides more of the target warmth of a patio heater with controlled burners, but at least some of the charm you get from a fire pit with a bowl of flames dancing on top. 

With 80,000 BTUs, it packed plenty of punch to warm me and some friends well into the evening on a chilly March night. All the power means it'll burn a healthy amount of propane, too. We went through about half a tank in just a few hours with the heaters on full blast. 

At $500, it's on par with other high-performance patio heaters and fire pits. If you want the best of both in one unit, the Fireside360 is one of the few options on the market that delivers.Â