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Radiant Floor and Ceiling Heating - It is Simply Soothing!
By Tim Carter
DEAR TIM: I am giving serious thought to
incorporating a new hydronic radiant heating system into my
new home. Is this technology reliable or is it just a fad?
Can you install these systems in existing homes? How do you
size the system? What are the disadvantages if any? Alicia
P., Bennington, VT
DEAR ALICIA: Next winter you
are going to be as snug as a bug in a rug. Hydronic radiant
heating is not new by any means. It is just a fancy word for
any system that uses water to deliver heat. Radiant heating
systems have been used for thousands of years. Anyone who
has warmed themselves in a cave or a room with a fire has
felt the natural warmth of radiant energy. Romans used a primitive
radiant heating system to warm public and private baths. Your
parents most likely dried their snow packed gloves on top
of steam or hot water radiators. Radiant heating is not a
fad. It is reliable and simply superb.
There are numerous advantages to using radiant
heating. It is a known fact that radiant heating systems produce
higher and more consistent comfort levels than a forced air
system. Hidden radiant systems that use piping inside of floors,
ceilings, and walls permit unlimited design possibilities
and furniture arrangements. Certain systems allow you to combine
domestic hot water needs for bathing and household cleaning
into your heating system. There is no need to buy a separate
hot water heater. You can also easily create zones within
your house. Electronic controls allow you to send heat to
only those portions of the house that you occupy during the
course of the day and night.
Even though your new house will have a specific
heat loss that can be measured, tests over the years have
shown that radiant or hydronically heated houses tend to have
lower energy bills. The fans that push heated air in a forced
air system pressurize the inside of a house. Heated air in
certain instances can actually be pushed out of tiny cracks
and holes in exterior walls and ceilings. Forced air systems
tend to create layers of heat in rooms. Temperatures between
the floor and ceiling can vary by more than 15 degrees. Houses
heated with radiant systems tend to have uniform temperatures
throughout each room.
If a friend or relative has a chronically cold
room or area in their house, they can sometimes use certain
radiant systems to make the trouble areas toasty warm. Some
hydronic systems allow you to staple flexible piping to the
underside of exposed wood floor systems. If the area to be
heated is the size of several rooms, the heat source can often
be a low cost hot water heater. These same systems can be
used to heat entire houses. Other companies make reliable
radiant nets that incorporate low temperature electric cables.
These can be installed under ceramic tile, slate, or marble
floors in bathrooms kitchens or entrance halls.
Hydronic and radiant heating systems are sized
just like any heating system. Your heating contractor must
do a heat loss calculation. The heating contractor measures
the surface area of exterior walls and insulated ceilings,
window sizes and glass type, thickness of wall and attic insulation,
house orientation, and numerous other factors. These measurements
are entered into a computer program that determines the amount
of heat your house loses each hour. Based upon these calculations
the contractor can select the correct sized boiler or water
heater and produce the correct design of the hydronic heat
delivery system. Do not underestimate the importance of this
procedure. If you install a system that is too small, you
will be uncomfortable. A system that is too large will waste
energy.
There are few disadvantages to hydronic heating
systems. If you require cental air conditioning, your overall
heating and cooling system equipment cost will be higher since
you have to install two delivery systems (piping for the heat
and ducts for cooling). You may also find it hard to locate
a qualified and knowledgeable installer. Many contractors
are resistant to change and may try to talk you out of an
hydronic system. Contact various hydronic system manufacturers.
Ask them for a list of qualified installers in your area.
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