Home > Off Topic > heating a room |
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A1GSS Member Since: 24 Dec 2010 Location: Saffron Walden, Essex Posts: 1973 |
It's fab. I'd always go for it now if I can. Graham
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4th Dec 2014 10:48pm |
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Andy_J Member Since: 14 Nov 2011 Location: Muir of Ord Posts: 479 |
good if you have concrete floors, doesn't work well on wooden floors. Not good if you have carpet on top of it either, but makes a tile floor toasty 56 TDV8 Vogue SE
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4th Dec 2014 11:08pm |
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KurtVerbose Member Since: 08 Aug 2010 Location: Les Arses Posts: 5848 |
I've done my whole house with it.
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4th Dec 2014 11:14pm |
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Bellini Member Since: 11 Jan 2012 Location: Berkshire Posts: 2261 |
We have it in our bathroom and love it. Si. <This is my name.
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5th Dec 2014 8:23am |
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Robert Member Since: 25 Oct 2011 Location: Perigueux Posts: 2289 |
Dependig on your heater, floor insulation and topfloor it is very comfy. You do need a stone or tile floor though. If you're thinking of a wooden topfloor it's no use. |
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5th Dec 2014 8:33am |
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KurtVerbose Member Since: 08 Aug 2010 Location: Les Arses Posts: 5848 |
I have a wooden floor Robert, and many others do. It does work, although as wood is quite a good insulator, it doesn't work any where near as well as stone. You also have to choose your wood carefully. It is nice to walk barefoot on a heated stone floor though - as my bathroom is, and as I will finish my basement. |
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5th Dec 2014 8:59am |
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Andy3681 Member Since: 13 Jan 2012 Location: Newcastle under lyme/ Le Dorat Haute Vienne Posts: 912 |
I put it in the conservatory on a well insulated base. ( polystyrene and turkey tinfoil to reflect heat)
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5th Dec 2014 9:13am |
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northernmonkeyjones Member Since: 24 Mar 2012 Location: derby Posts: 8636 |
put it this way, i build quite a few houses and have never used it and with sap compliance on new builds UF heating makes meeting the TER/DER very difficult. Which in layman's terms means though on the face of it it would seem quite an efficient way to heat the space, the actual energy use calks for it shows it to be inefficient, at least in the houses we build. I'm not sure why this is, but iirc the calks are moving away from thermal mass being a good thing, and a lot of energy goes into heating the screed (high thermal mass) that the pipes are bedded in before you get a useable amount of heat out.
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5th Dec 2014 6:07pm |
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Rob2529 Member Since: 22 Nov 2010 Location: Wirral, uk Posts: 1470 |
If this was installed how deep would the floor need to be dug out to keep a level surface running though a house? I fancy it in the kitchen but think the ballache of digging out the old floor to lay insulation and new screed would make standard rads the way to go. I know electric is quick and easy but need a weekly lotto win to run the stuff. [img]http://www.fuelly.com/driver/rob2529/range-rover[img/]
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5th Dec 2014 7:59pm |
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northernmonkeyjones Member Since: 24 Mar 2012 Location: derby Posts: 8636 |
i reckon you should need to go down, 50mm for the screed, 75mm for the insulation (minimum, wouldn't comply with new regs) and 100mm for a new ground bearing slab more if you need new hardcore sub base. so 9inches min below finished floor if the sub base is ok. There is nothing that can't be fixed with a hammer😜😜
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5th Dec 2014 9:12pm |
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Sandyt Member Since: 07 Nov 2013 Location: Wraysbury Windsor Posts: 2266 |
I have used it in a couple of houses the current one mix of air heat pump and ground heat pump driven by solar panel assist so not too expensive to run |
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5th Dec 2014 9:43pm |
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Welshdragon Member Since: 20 Jan 2012 Location: here and there...but not where I should be Posts: 1899 |
Cheers guys , looks like that's the way forward to heating the kitchen and dinning room
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5th Dec 2014 9:55pm |
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KurtVerbose Member Since: 08 Aug 2010 Location: Les Arses Posts: 5848 |
Tell me about it.
Admin note: this post has had its images recovered from a money grabbing photo hosting site and reinstated |
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6th Dec 2014 11:43am |
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Cam-Tech-Craig Member Since: 03 Aug 2011 Location: Gloucestershire Posts: 16298 |
You building a dungeon David? |
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6th Dec 2014 11:45am |
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