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Radiant heat or forced air?

ishiboo

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Oshkosh, WI
I am planning my build starting in 2 months, and one question I have is on climate control. I definitely want air conditioning in the shop area, both for my comfort (I like it cool!) and humidity.

Is it worth doing radiant for heat, and one or two mini-splits for AC... or should I just do a conventional furnace/AC?

Building is probably going to be about 42x60, shop area will be half that... 30x42. There will be a wall, of course.
 
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jonjon1

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I few things to consider with furnace vs radiant.

First is initial cost- obviously radiant is going to be more expensive to install.

Next is comfort radiant will be more comfortable

Radiant normally uses less energy

Furnaces can be left off in cold weather, radiant either needs glycol {which is terrible for heating systems, everything about it, corrosive, inhibits convection, lowers efficiency, etc} or to always be on in cold weather.

In most cases a package unit {either side mount or roof top} is the way to go in a shop, they are easy to service, very reliable, and very inexpensive to install and purchase.

You have a few choices with package units, you can do heat and cool with heatpump, or you can do heat cool with gas burners, heatpump and gas burners, or with electric, there are a lot of combinations... I always tell customers to get a heatpump, they are the way to go.

If I was building a building right now, I would do this...
Package or split conventional units {heatpumps, with electric coils, and gas furnace}, I like dual units, so would most likely do one for each side of your shop. I would take the money saved from not doing radiant and take advantage of the solar rebates right now, I would do a 10K watt tracker system or some type of pv panel system.

last summer I did a similar building, it was 46x56 had about 800 sq feet of offices some elevated and the rest was high ceiling storage and work areas {they make tee shirts, I actually buy my company tee shirts from them}. So I installed 1 standard split a/c heatpump furnace setup for the offices. Then a package unit for the open side heat pump/gas/electric. I subbed out the install for the solar, it ended up costing them $14K out of pocket which was a super low interest loan. I did the math they should heat and cool that place for around $100 a month, lol...
 

kabinenroller

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898
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S.E. Wisconsin USA
As I have posted on this forum before, I really like my hydronic system. It is efficient, quiet, and makes comfortable heat. If your building is insulated well and you keep the doors closed when it gets hot outside your building should stay relatively cool. I am in about the same climate as you, I heat 1,675 sq, ft. Of my 2,400 sq, ft. Building. The main issue is insulation, you cannot have too much. Also, in my building the dividing wall between the two areas is build like an exterior wall, insulated well also the concrete floor has a 2" thermo break under the wall so the two floors do not transfer temps.
What type of building are you considering? ( pole, stick, block, etc.)
 
OP
I

ishiboo

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Oshkosh, WI
I suppose the other big advantage to radiant is I can easily add a wood boiler to it, right?

Shop will be used for everything... Woodworking, metalworking, car cleaning.
 

kj_mustang

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Location
Harrisonburg, VA
One of my main reasons for choosing radiant, safety. If you are using a lot of solvents in your garage with a open flame heat source, you better be careful. I will be painting in one bay a lot so I choose this type of heat.
 

yeldogt

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You should install tubing in the slab if you plan on having a concrete floor. Many discussions on various threads about insulation .. IMO you have to have enough. The slab needs to be properly insulated in a cold climate .. then ... why not add the tubing for radiant.

I live in the mid-atlantic -- so the heating load (need) in the spring and fall is spotty. Radiant is great in the dead of winter when it runs continuously .. but in the shoulder months radiant can overheat a building even with proper reset.

The ideal setup is to have heat capabilities within the AC system so as to provide heat during this time. I'm also in the camp of more tubing for quicker response and less water temp. My favorite space was radiant coupled with a gas HVAC -- I kept the floor warm and used the gas heat to raise the temp when occupied. If on propane .. insulation becomes even more important. Mini-split heat pumps can now provide this also

In really cold areas (Maine) with shorter fall and spring -- radiant is actually easier to get right.
 

theoldwizard1

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SE MI
You did not mention what fuels you have to choose from ? If you have NG using any other heat source will be difficult to beat the installation cost and operation cost.

If you can afford it, the best solution would be radiant heat with a small NG boiler for your radiant floor AND mini-split heat pump(s). At 30x42, each half would likely require 2 air handlers. They do make heat pump compressors with 4 output ports that can operate independently. 2 medium sized heat pumps would be more economical to operate, but of course would cost a lot more to install.

Even if you go with mini-split A/C only, they are more efficient than a central AC and each of your 2 rooms can be controlled independently. They also take up zero floor space.



If NG is not available, it is a whole different story.
 
Last edited:

theoldwizard1

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As I have posted on this forum before, I really like my hydronic system. It is efficient, quiet, and makes comfortable heat.
Unless you have experienced it, you can not fully appreciate it !

I suppose the other big advantage to radiant is I can easily add a wood boiler to it, right?

Easy is always relevant.

Easier than 2 wood stoves and fans trying to blow the heat around !
 

kabinenroller

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S.E. Wisconsin USA
"Radiant is great in the dead of winter when it runs continuously .. but in the shoulder months radiant can overheat a building even with proper reset."

I must disagree with the above statement. This is my second building with hydronic heat. I do not have a back up heat source. Here is Wisconsin we have cold winters also, I keep my building at 59 degrees all year, I do not adjust he thermostat for seasons. The system does not run continuously when it is cold out, not even when it is below zero. ( in fact I check to make sure everything is OK when I have not heard the pump run for a couple of days) My shop is very comfortable to work in all winter, and the best part is that everything in the building is a constant temp. No cold spots. In the summer he system never runs because the thermostat is not calling for the pump to cycle. I run a weak mix of glycol just to make sure it will not freeze. He heat source is a Propane Takgi wall mount on demand water heater. ( I have no NG, I also consulted with the manufacturer on the sizing of the heater for my particular building)
The most important factor is making sure the building is designed with hydronic in mind. Insulate, then insulate again.
 

mygarageone

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Munising , Mich
If you can afford radiant floor heating by all means do. Forced scorced air Will never hold a candle to radiant heating when it comes to,comfort and you can keep your temps much lower because the floors are warm.
The argument against a boiler because you may have to have some anti freeze to protect it.
Well there are tens of thousands of jobs with anti freeze in them. And if the system is properly done and quality valves are used , there is little problem. Especially with a mod com boiler . I have it in my work shop / garage for 4 yrs now and haven't seen nar a sign of antifreeze. But then again , I have just enough to protect it from bursting @ -20
Once the floor is poured it's to late in do radiant.
 

yeldogt

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"Radiant is great in the dead of winter when it runs continuously .. but in the shoulder months radiant can overheat a building even with proper reset."

I must disagree with the above statement. This is my second building with hydronic heat. I do not have a back up heat source. Here is Wisconsin we have cold winters also, I keep my building at 59 degrees all year, I do not adjust he thermostat for seasons. The system does not run continuously when it is cold out, not even when it is below zero. ( in fact I check to make sure everything is OK when I have not heard the pump run for a couple of days) My shop is very comfortable to work in all winter, and the best part is that everything in the building is a constant temp. No cold spots. In the summer he system never runs because the thermostat is not calling for the pump to cycle. I run a weak mix of glycol just to make sure it will not freeze. He heat source is a Propane Takgi wall mount on demand water heater. ( I have no NG, I also consulted with the manufacturer on the sizing of the heater for my particular building)
The most important factor is making sure the building is designed with hydronic in mind. Insulate, then insulate again.


Heating to 59 degrees is not heating in my book ... and heating is all about load. Yours does not run because it does not need to -- I guess. What is your solar radiant gain? Keep doing what you doing because my house/ studio would be lower than 59 in two days without heat.

With proper reset my systems a "on" -- that is what I am talking about. The smallest circulator is moving the water around and the boiler runs enough to keep the slab warm in my studio .. and the panel and floors warm in the house.

Many spaces need a bit of heat in the morning and when the sun comes up (solar radiation on the building) they become overheated as the slab is still warm.
 

kabinenroller

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Yes 59 degrees is not "warm" if you are not moving around. If either of my buildings warmed up to 60+ I would feel uncomfortable. Because everything in the building including equipment is a constant temp. 59 feels very good. I have turned mine up when I was dialing in the system and it just got too warm. I have no leaky windows or doors to create a draft, the building is tight but breathable. That is the difference.
I would never go back to forced air, everyone who walks in my building comments on how comfortable it is even on the coldest days.
But- everyone is entitled to their own opinion.
 

Kamn

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Ontario, Canada
Radiant all day long.....no pushing dust around, more consistent temps and if done well can be more efficient. Also need to add that it isn't that expensive like others have mentioned, you just need to shop around.
 

yeldogt

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Yes 59 degrees is not "warm" if you are not moving around. If either of my buildings warmed up to 60+ I would feel uncomfortable. Because everything in the building including equipment is a constant temp. 59 feels very good. I have turned mine up when I was dialing in the system and it just got too warm. I have no leaky windows or doors to create a draft, the building is tight but breathable. That is the difference.
I would never go back to forced air, everyone who walks in my building comments on how comfortable it is even on the coldest days.
But- everyone is entitled to their own opinion.

Slab temp is very important -- and the mass of the slab. It takes more BTU's to heat a 4" slab then it does to heat a product like warmboard -- and the slab will naturally stay warm longer (releasing heat). The BTU's are the same -- but the floor with less mass will react faster. Install a 5" slab or 6" slab and the numbers grow.

With passive radiant a huge slab was needed to capture as much heat from the sun when possible -- since the heat was free.

You must have a high mass floor and an initial high temp slab that then releases heat. The most comfortable spaces I have been in have low mass floors with accurate floor temp -- they are also very efficient with lower stack effect.

There are a lot of variables -- it is the best heat.
 

finn

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The UP, God's country
Yes 59 degrees is not "warm" if you are not moving around. If either of my buildings warmed up to 60+ I would feel uncomfortable. Because everything in the building including equipment is a constant temp. 59 feels very good. I have turned mine up when I was dialing in the system and it just got too warm. I have no leaky windows or doors to create a draft, the building is tight but breathable. That is the difference.
I would never go back to forced air, everyone who walks in my building comments on how comfortable it is even on the coldest days.
But- everyone is entitled to their own opinion.

I have 2 shops, one with in floor radiant and one with a hanging propane unit heater. The radiant heated shop is comfortable (for me) to work at 47-49 degrees. Tools and cars are ok.

The other shop has to be above 60, and pre-heated so the tools are warmed.

The radiant heated shop costs more to operate, even when correcting for floorspace and cube volume though, as it isn't practical to "idle" the system during periods of non- use.
 

jonjon1

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If you can afford radiant floor heating by all means do. Forced scorced air Will never hold a candle to radiant heating when it comes to,comfort and you can keep your temps much lower because the floors are warm.
The argument against a boiler because you may have to have some anti freeze to protect it.
Well there are tens of thousands of jobs with anti freeze in them. And if the system is properly done and quality valves are used , there is little problem. Especially with a mod com boiler . I have it in my work shop / garage for 4 yrs now and haven't seen nar a sign of antifreeze. But then again , I have just enough to protect it from bursting @ -20
Once the floor is poured it's to late in do radiant.

Time to change thta anti freeze, lol.. Keep an eye on your PH, I would NOT run Glycol in a mod con, even the "new" stainless safe glycol is not that safe for stainless. I have seen the aftermath, believe me, these mod cons don't like imperfect water, I have filled many with bottled water when the properties well water did not test well. And this is common, I was actually told to do this by 2 manufacturers!!!

5 years and I would flush and treat any glycol system, if you have an expensive mod con, use a flat plate heat exchanger to decouple the glycol from your HX, I have pictures of jobs I have done that use this method, it doesnt add a ton to the job and they last much longer than mixing valve systems..

I have seen many jobs get ripped out do to anti frz damage, the worse is the press fittings, them little orings get eaten right up.

Anyway back on track, there is more to radiant then just throwing 2500 feet of tubing in the floor, you need to insulate under the tubing, so say you use foam board and reflective bubble wrap which is how I do it, first put you 2" thick 4x8 foam boards down with your reflective barrier $4000 for a medium sized floor.
Then I only use 5/8 and up size wirsbo uponor hepex tubing which is almost $1 a foot after tax {I think I pay $.80 per ft when I buy 1K foot rolls of 5/8"}, so say $3000 for tubing.
Figure another $500 or so for walking stick staples, corner bends, a box, and uni strut with clamps...
A single floor can cost you $7500 before you pay labor or buy a manifold!!! OH AND DONT FORGET YOUR $5000 Boiler with $1800 in trim, $15K in materials most contractors double that for installation, so you can be $30K with no AC.. Granted do it yourself, just use bubble wrap with no foam, metal wire net with zip ties instead of plastic clips{BAD BAD IDEA, I use the walking stick with plastic staples, I have seen first hand damage caused by metal mesh to radiant}...

So when you compare this to a 5 ton heatpump package unit for $2600 {and thats with an electric or gas duct heater included}, that simply plugs into your building through a wall, figure a $180 curb set and $1000 of duct work {and most of the time you can do the dw for less than $1K}.

You can have dual heat source, a/c , and air filtration all in one unit for under $4K.

So sure radiant is comfortable, and hydronic heat is awesome, I love it, it has been a huge part of my life, I have written articles about it and haven't committed more time to any other 1 subject in my life as to hydronic heating, lol its sad, but I remember not being able to fall a sleep because I couldn't stop double and triple checking the flow rates and projected deltas in my head from the next days job, BUT its expensive and brings a lot more to the table, like future service, additives, corrosion, etc.
A package unit is a compressor, single control that can be replaced with 1 of 10 brands for any unit and be had for a couple hundred bucks, a couple coils, and a couple fan motors, add an electric duct heater or a gas fired HX and that same control and fan is used for secondary or primary heat depending on your climate.
 
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4cyclic

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Time to change thta anti freeze, lol.. Keep an eye on your PH, I would NOT run Glycol in a mod con, even the "new" stainless safe glycol is not that safe for stainless. I have seen the aftermath, believe me, these mod cons don't like imperfect water, I have filled many with bottled water when the properties well water did not test well. And this is common, I was actually told to do this by 2 manufacturers!!!

5 years and I would flush and treat any glycol system, if you have an expensive mod con, use a flat plate heat exchanger to decouple the glycol from your HX, I have pictures of jobs I have done that use this method, it doesnt add a ton to the job and they last much longer than mixing valve systems..

I have seen many jobs get ripped out do to anti frz damage, the worse is the press fittings, them little orings get eaten right up.

Anyway back on track, there is more to radiant then just throwing 2500 feet of tubing in the floor, you need to insulate under the tubing, so say you use foam board and reflective bubble wrap which is how I do it, first put you 2" thick 4x8 foam boards down with your reflective barrier $4000 for a medium sized floor.
Then I only use 5/8 and up size wirsbo uponor hepex tubing which is almost $1 a foot after tax {I think I pay $.80 per ft when I buy 1K foot rolls of 5/8"}, so say $3000 for tubing.
Figure another $500 or so for walking stick staples, corner bends, a box, and uni strut with clamps...
A single floor can cost you $7500 before you pay labor or buy a manifold!!! OH AND DONT FORGET YOUR $5000 Boiler with $1800 in trim, $15K in materials most contractors double that for installation, so you can be $30K with no AC.. Granted do it yourself, just use bubble wrap with no foam, metal wire net with zip ties instead of plastic clips{BAD BAD IDEA, I use the walking stick with plastic staples, I have seen first hand damage caused by metal mesh to radiant}...

So when you compare this to a 5 ton heatpump package unit for $2600 {and thats with an electric or gas duct heater included}, that simply plugs into your building through a wall, figure a $180 curb set and $1000 of duct work {and most of the time you can do the dw for less than $1K}.

You can have dual heat source, a/c , and air filtration all in one unit for under $4K.

So sure radiant is comfortable, and hydronic heat is awesome, I love it, it has been a huge part of my life, I have written articles about it and haven't committed more time to any other 1 subject in my life as to hydronic heating, lol its sad, but I remember not being able to fall a sleep because I couldn't stop double and triple checking the flow rates and projected deltas in my head from the next days job, BUT its expensive and brings a lot more to the table, like future service, additives, corrosion, etc.
A package unit is a compressor, single control that can be replaced with 1 of 10 brands for any unit and be had for a couple hundred bucks, a couple coils, and a couple fan motors, add an electric duct heater or a gas fired HX and that same control and fan is used for secondary or primary heat depending on your climate.

You would still need 2 inch foam under the slab to insulate regardless if radiant or
heatpump in colder regions.
 

mygarageone

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Oct 16, 2013
Messages
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Munising , Mich
Jon Jon
Your 30 yrs old and talk like you have been around this stuff for 50 yrs not 15.
I have been involved in this industry for going on 50 yrs and know several engineers , designers , installers and manufactors who also know this business , you seem to know more than all of us combined , how can that be ?
 

heathcrow

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Oct 16, 2011
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Time to change thta anti freeze, lol.. Keep an eye on your PH, I would NOT run Glycol in a mod con, even the "new" stainless safe glycol is not that safe for stainless. I have seen the aftermath, believe me, these mod cons don't like imperfect water, I have filled many with bottled water when the properties well water did not test well. And this is common, I was actually told to do this by 2 manufacturers!!!

5 years and I would flush and treat any glycol system, if you have an expensive mod con, use a flat plate heat exchanger to decouple the glycol from your HX, I have pictures of jobs I have done that use this method, it doesnt add a ton to the job and they last much longer than mixing valve systems..

I have seen many jobs get ripped out do to anti frz damage, the worse is the press fittings, them little orings get eaten right up.

Anyway back on track, there is more to radiant then just throwing 2500 feet of tubing in the floor, you need to insulate under the tubing, so say you use foam board and reflective bubble wrap which is how I do it, first put you 2" thick 4x8 foam boards down with your reflective barrier $4000 for a medium sized floor.
Then I only use 5/8 and up size wirsbo uponor hepex tubing which is almost $1 a foot after tax {I think I pay $.80 per ft when I buy 1K foot rolls of 5/8"}, so say $3000 for tubing.
Figure another $500 or so for walking stick staples, corner bends, a box, and uni strut with clamps...
A single floor can cost you $7500 before you pay labor or buy a manifold!!! OH AND DONT FORGET YOUR $5000 Boiler with $1800 in trim, $15K in materials most contractors double that for installation, so you can be $30K with no AC.. Granted do it yourself, just use bubble wrap with no foam, metal wire net with zip ties instead of plastic clips{BAD BAD IDEA, I use the walking stick with plastic staples, I have seen first hand damage caused by metal mesh to radiant}...

So when you compare this to a 5 ton heatpump package unit for $2600 {and thats with an electric or gas duct heater included}, that simply plugs into your building through a wall, figure a $180 curb set and $1000 of duct work {and most of the time you can do the dw for less than $1K}.

You can have dual heat source, a/c , and air filtration all in one unit for under $4K.

So sure radiant is comfortable, and hydronic heat is awesome, I love it, it has been a huge part of my life, I have written articles about it and haven't committed more time to any other 1 subject in my life as to hydronic heating, lol its sad, but I remember not being able to fall a sleep because I couldn't stop double and triple checking the flow rates and projected deltas in my head from the next days job, BUT its expensive and brings a lot more to the table, like future service, additives, corrosion, etc.
A package unit is a compressor, single control that can be replaced with 1 of 10 brands for any unit and be had for a couple hundred bucks, a couple coils, and a couple fan motors, add an electric duct heater or a gas fired HX and that same control and fan is used for secondary or primary heat depending on your climate.

This makes sense as long as natural gas is available. Having to use propane would balance things quite a bit.
 

pseudorealityx

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USA
Every commercial high efficiency boiler loop I've ever seen or designed runs a glycol mix. Heat exchanger or not, everyone uses glycol. Just too much liability and it's not exactly 'easy' to fix a burst pipe in a slap or elsewhere.
 

jonjon1

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Every commercial high efficiency boiler loop I've ever seen or designed runs a glycol mix. Heat exchanger or not, everyone uses glycol. Just too much liability and it's not exactly 'easy' to fix a burst pipe in a slap or elsewhere.

As I say all the time, med-large commercial systems are night and day different from resi systems. Glycol inhibits heat transfer more than plain water..

OK, I told my self I wasn't going to post much more about hvac because it seems to bother some people, the fact that I am only in my mid 30's I can't possibly know wtf I am talking about... But here I go, lol...

I want to share what I think about glycol.

First, if you are going to use glycol, use DOW brand, make sure to buy the inhibitor version, not just glycol, I have seen the old purple st8 stuff eat ss in less than 2 years...

So first everyone is crazy about efficiency, so lets talk about what glycol does to how much energy you use- it is thicker- viscosity goes from something like 1.3 cP {plain water} to 3.3 cP for a glycol/water mix set at around -8. So its harder to circulate, need a larger pump to get desired flow rates..

Next - corrosive, NO MATTER WHAT, it is more corrosive than water, even if you mix it to -5 and run all the inhibitors...

Next - It doesn't last forever, its NOT free to start with I have done floors that used $1500 worth of chem on more than a few occasions and then told the customer "we should change this in 4-5 years"!!! I have showed them on paper that is cheaper to not use anti freeze and install another back up heating unit to circulate the floor incase the primary goes down... Now I know this is NOT the thinking that some of the guys that have "50" years in the business would say, but the math doesn't lie, $1500 of chems and $200 in labor every 5 years or spend the initial $5K for a back up boiler that will last 50 years...

Last one I will talk about is efficiency, you have to heat it hotter to get the same energy, its hard to explain but glycol {propylene and ethylene both and almost equal} inhibit heat transfer more than water.
If we call water {which freezes at 0 degrees} 100% thermal conductivity {in actual numbers its something like .585 w/(mk) but not to confuse anyone, ignore that and call it 100% } a water and glycol mix that freezes around -8 degrees would be 88% , so you loose 12% {and that is the good stuff from a company like atec or dow}.. So throw 12% away, thats what it boils down to...


So since it is all about money, lets add it up 12% thermal transfer lost, $100 {for a small system} lost every 5 years {if you do it yourself}, and the corrosive factor that is going to shorten your equipments life span by 20% {that is my number, I made up from my experience, no scientific back up for that, lol , sorry}...

This is why I tell people I am installing rad systems for that want anti frze to look over all the other options..

A back up boiler, piped in with a hydraulic separator {purpose built or close tees}, this is easy with gas, since for most floors, a basic rinnai water heater, or tiny cast iron boiler will do this for $800-$1500, you wont need all the trim since it is already there, the unit will last a LONG time since you will only use it in an emergency, I have done this many times, and what I do it schedule service for them units in the winter, and while I am servicing their primary I let the secondary run the system for a couple hours, then switch it back, it makes sure everything is OK and it runs the unit at least once a year, but the customer is capable of running ti the same way as a test, since it is piped in in a manner that allows simple conversion from a to b...

1-isolate as much of the system from the glycol as you can, so no glycol in the boiler, just in one side of the FPHX, the manifolds, and the floor.

2- rinse and change it every 4 years {3 is better 5 is the longest I would go}.

3-use good stuff, test it with the proper device {not a ball float meter, lol} refractometers can work well, don't just do percents, some companies say 20% and I trust my refractometer more than their ball park and in every case I can put less than the % they specify for desired fp.

4- materials, dont use orings {mechanical seals}, don't use iron/steel pipe- use s/s, cross linked poly, etc.

1 more thing to keep in mind, install an alarm so the floor sensor knows when the boiler is off, don't wait to say "is it cold in here", this will give you a head start, it takes a pretty long time to freeze a floor, this will give you time to get everything fixed so you don't have to worry about your glycol count...


I can obviously go on and on, but I don't want to ruffle any feathers, I am not writing this stuff to be a douche, I am trying to help someone with a fresh idea, vs the same old ideas from 50 years ago...

I will go on record as saying that antifreeze is the devil, lol If you can get away with not having it, do yourself a favor and don't have it, BUT on the other hand I will admit, its not as easy as just draining it out or not using it, you need to be proactive about what happens when anti frz would be needed, a genny for when the power goes out, a back up source of warm water {depending on the size of your building this could be a 40 gallon gas or electric water heater}, and most important an alarm that lets you know where there is an issue, this can also be as simple as a thermostat {t87} mounted 5"s from the floor and set to a temp that would allow you to know the floor isnt keeping up {say your primary is set at 65 yu could set the floor stat at 63 if its 63 at the floor and the primary tstat is at 65 something is not running}, you wire that to a simple 12v wall wart and car buzzer, you hear the buzzer you know to check the heat. I know a lot of boilers have alarm contacts, but that wont warn you if a circuit goes air bound, a manifold seals shut, a circulator stops, etc...


SO good luck, please read my posts as just another idea, I am not trying to show anyone up or bust balls, just giving a fresh take that a lot of people never heard before, that is all, if it helps someone, good, if you don't like my ideas, post yours, I love debates and I have an open mind, convince me of a better way and I will preach that..



ONE more NOTE- I have fixed a bunch of frozen {pex in cement} floors {well maybe 20 over the years}, they don't break all over and they are easier than you would think to fix, I use my thermal imager to find the frozen spots, demo saw to cut her open {or the bosch chipper depending on the floor}, uponor expansion fittings for the repair {they flow the best since they have the largest id}, then re-pour what we removed... I think the cheapest floor I ever fixed was a small house, had OLD antifrz in it, boiler went out for about 3 days, they were using electric heaters and when they got the parts to their wall hung boiler in the mail {weren't in stock locally} it was too late, floor froze and they kept the circ on like they were told, but didnt matter, too cold. It had 2 breaks close to each other, the bill was $4800, the insurance company covered it, as they did for EVERY floor I ever repaired, no questions asked, they come out check it, call to fix it and pay.... So its not the end of the world, while it certainly ***** and should be avoided, its not like you are ripping up an entire floor {which if it was needed the insurance co would pay for that too}...

This is why I always say to insulate the floor very well, reflective and foam and what ever you can afford, throw it under there...
 
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dirttracker18

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Aug 10, 2009
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Slate River, ON
If you plan to keep it heated, you can't beat the in floor heat.

Everyone that spends any time in my shop always asks how it heated. They then comment on how comfortable it is and great it is that moving air is not blowing **** everywhere whenever the furnace comes on.

Two buddies and since built garages and both went in floor after working in mine. A couple other guys are building houses and doing the same in their homes.
 

Denwood

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Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
Every commercial high efficiency boiler loop I've ever seen or designed runs a glycol mix. Heat exchanger or not, everyone uses glycol. Just too much liability and it's not exactly 'easy' to fix a burst pipe in a slap or elsewhere.

No one here uses glycol, at least commercially. Our 4800 sq/ft system uses plain old water. February temps were -21C..average. The system in connected to city water via a back flow prevention system, and pressure limiter set to 15psi. A garage where heat is turned off would of course require glycol...but that would be abnormal..no one would turn off radiant heat in this climate.

Our building uses both radiant, and forced air (via 5 air handlers, 5 AC units, one mini-split). Doing this again, (as much as we like radiant) I'd insulate the slab and just go with the air handlers. AC and fresh air requirements means we had to have several HRVs. If you were to compare insulated vs non-insulated slabs in forced air systems, I suspect you'd hear very different stories.

Our main floor slab never feels warm, as the envelope is very well insulated. My staff pretty much complains at temps below 68F, and research confirms that at least with residential, lower set points are a myth. We do have to keep the air handlers running during the day, as the HRV system is useless without it.

If you're like me, and leave the shop unheated when not in use, then a thin insulated slab and forced air makes sense. I turn it off if painting, and generally don't do major paint work (with VOC) over winter. If you need to cool and heat, insulate your slab, and go with forced air or mini-split. Radiant is great, however the expense (and it was large) may not make the most sense. If you're planning on solar hot water heat..well then your decision is simple. Our install was pretty extensive:

cinevate2.jpg


cinevate1.jpg
 
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pseudorealityx

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Nov 10, 2009
Messages
999
Location
USA
No one here uses glycol, at least commercially. Our 4800 sq/ft system uses plain old water. February temps were -21C..average. The system in connected to city water via a back flow prevention system, and pressure limiter set to 15psi. A garage where heat is turned off would of course require glycol...but that would be abnormal..no one would turn off radiant heat in this climate.

Our building uses both radiant, and forced air (via 5 air handlers, 5 AC units, one mini-split). Doing this again, (as much as we like radiant) I'd insulate the slab and just go with the air handlers. AC and fresh air requirements means we had to have several HRVs. If you were to compare insulated vs non-insulated slabs in forced air systems, I suspect you'd hear very different stories.

Our main floor slab never feels warm, as the envelope is very well insulated. My staff pretty much complains at temps below 68F, and research confirms that at least with residential, lower set points are a myth. We do have to keep the air handlers running during the day, as the HRV system is useless without it.

If you're like me, and leave the shop unheated when not in use, then a thin insulated slab and forced air makes sense. I turn it off if painting, and generally don't do major paint work (with VOC) over winter. If you need to cool and heat, insulate your slab, and go with forced air or mini-split. Radiant is great, however the expense (and it was large) may not make the most sense. If you're planning on solar hot water heat..well then your decision is simple. Our install was pretty extensive:

cinevate2.jpg


cinevate1.jpg

What happens if you have a long term power outage?
 

dirttracker18

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Messages
3,191
Location
Slate River, ON
Doubtful, at least in my experience. The only buildings that "always" get generators are hospitals, high rises, etc.

Maybe Canada is significantly different?

Here we rarely have outages and when we do long term would be maybe 12 hours, max. A small generator could easily be set up to keep the floor from freezing in the event of something longer.

I am in the same area and do not have glycol in my system either. I understand the concern but long term would need to be a couple of days before I start to worry about my slab starting to freeze.
 

jonjon1

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Mar 11, 2015
Messages
1,036
Most buildings around here have gennys, I have 2 at my house, and have 2 at my office building. If you are spending the money on a radiant system, a $700 genny is a good investment, I couldn't picture a property owner not having at least a small genny at their disposal, you can buy a honda eu2000 {I own one and love it} that will easily run a heating system especially gas for $950 and it will last FOREVER, I would use VP small engine fuel if you may go a long period of time with out using it, but besides that they are awesome. I have a built in diesel genny at the house and my shop, the house is 35kw and the shop is 20kw, well worth their price, the las couplle times the power went out, once when RI was flooded we lost it for a week, in CT when we had that hurricane when the leaves were still on the trees we lost it for 2 weeks...
 

rburke65

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Canfield, Ohio
So why not use plain water, and then if you should decide NOTto heat for whatever reason, why an you not blow out the water from the tuing and prevent any possible or future damage from the possible freeze? Seems reasonable to me. I just don't understand the big issue.
 

sprntpshr

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May 27, 2011
Messages
269
Location
Southern Ontario
If you are thinking about doing in-floor radiant, two things to consider. Do not skimp on under-slab insulation and instal sufficient length of tubing to use a lower input temperature vs high temp supply temp to the loop.

You can change the heat source depending what you have for a fuel source, you can't really go back and put tubing in a floor after it poured.
 

finn

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Mar 27, 2005
Messages
16,229
Location
The UP, God's country
So why not use plain water, and then if you should decide NOTto heat for whatever reason, why an you not blow out the water from the tuing and prevent any possible or future damage from the possible freeze? Seems reasonable to me. I just don't understand the big issue.

I used to blow out the pipes in my cabin when I shut it down for the winter. Even with a basement and pitched pipes, it was very difficult to get all the water out of the system.

After a second bout of repairing pipes upon a 2:00 am arrival, I gave up and left the heat on for the winter.

In a radiant heated slab, with the floor being the lowest point, evacuating all the water would be even harder, even with a compressed air blow out.

Antifreeze would be a more reasonable alternative.
 

Denwood

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Sep 22, 2014
Messages
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Location
Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada
JonJon, your post above is excellent. It's good that you addressed efficiency in terms of glycol mix. For solar hot water systems in cold climates, glycol is required, however there is a significant hit in heat transfer performance using it.
 

gnpenning

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Messages
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I have more questions than answers.
The first time I used in floor for my own place was back in 87. Everything i have done for myself since has been hydronic. I would never go back to forced air. The underslab insulation and thermo breaks to any out side wall is very important. Don't ask me how I know. Do not let your heat get out of the building. I used ICF's walls and will do it again.

Have you ever picked up a wrench in a forced air shop verses a in floor? The comfort level when working with anything metal is huge. My next place will by hydronic. Don't use staple up on upper floors. Staple down only.

For the A/c use ductless systems they will give you a back up heat as well. Here with rebates you can get them installed for around $1000 for the first unit.

For what it's worth I heat a little over 3400sq ft and my ng bill is about $600 for the year.
 
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