Measure the outdoor temperature at which your room reaches 70°F and becomes stable (i.e., the heater can't do any better and is putting out its full 5200 BTU/hr).
Subtract the outdoor temperature from 70°F. The result is the existing design delta-T between the space and outdoors.
Now add 5°F to the design delta-T you just computed. The result is the new design delta-T that you'd like to have (in order to achieve 75°F in the room at the same outdoor temperature).
Divide the new design delta-T by the existing delta-T. The result will be a number greater than one. This is the size factor by which your heater capacity needs to increase.
Multiply the size factor by the original heater capacity (5200 BTU/hr in your case). The result will be the new heater size needed.
For example, if your 70°F case occurs when the outdoor air is 20°F, the existing design delta-T is 50°F. You'd like a 75°F room, which means the new design delta-T is now 55°F. The sizing factor is 55°F/50°F or 1.1. The new heater size needed is 1.1 x 5200 BTU/hr or 5720 BTU/hr.
Cautions:
1) I've assumed a simple case, as if you were heating a typical small apartment. If your heating load varies significantly with factors other than the outdoor temperature, correction may be needed. An example would be anything that changes the amount of outdoor air reaching the space. If there are lots of windows and doors, the wind speed and direction could be as much of a factor as the outdoor temperature.
2) If you're going to design based on measurements, and your room has a roof load, be sure to measure on a cold night that is also clear (no clouds). Radiation to the night sky can be significant if no radiation barrier is in place. The attic can get cooler than the outdoor air under some conditions.
3) For energy conservation's sake, look at changing the load before up-sizing the heater. Insulate the walls and roof better, caulk around all penetrations, etc...
4) 5200 BTU/hr is suspiciously close to the heat output of a typical plug-in 1500W electric heater for residential use. If this is the case, please make sure the electrical circuit in the room can handle any additional heating capacity you want to add.
Advice:
Study some basic HVAC concepts and thermodynamics. There are good resources available to help you learn to size heating and air conditioning systems.
Good on ya,
Goober Dave
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