Crazy68Dart
Well-known member
Hey all. I spent the better part of the weekend researching this topic. I am ramping up for a build and would like to put PEX in the slab. I may not use it immediately, but it will allow me to go that route if I decide to in the future for heating.
My concern is over which type of 2" insulation board to use. EPS or XPS. I have searched the forum and internet, and it seems like the general consensus is that XPS is "better". It is certainly more expensive.
However, I read many accounts where type II EPS is "better" long term with R value performance. It is also lower cost, which is all good, but I am not after the cheapest alternative. I want to use what is going to last and perform.
This is a one time deal. I don't plan on ripping up a slab in 10-20 years because the the insulation performance is an issue. I would hate to invest all the money for the radiant heating system to at some point in the future have to shut it down because it becomes too expensive to use (i.e. insulation properties dimish and heat loss occurs). The hydronic setup is certainly more expensive and more complex to install, setup, and maintain than a simple forced air system (my last garage use a forced air electric heater).
Thanks as always for the help.
My concern is over which type of 2" insulation board to use. EPS or XPS. I have searched the forum and internet, and it seems like the general consensus is that XPS is "better". It is certainly more expensive.
However, I read many accounts where type II EPS is "better" long term with R value performance. It is also lower cost, which is all good, but I am not after the cheapest alternative. I want to use what is going to last and perform.
This is a one time deal. I don't plan on ripping up a slab in 10-20 years because the the insulation performance is an issue. I would hate to invest all the money for the radiant heating system to at some point in the future have to shut it down because it becomes too expensive to use (i.e. insulation properties dimish and heat loss occurs). The hydronic setup is certainly more expensive and more complex to install, setup, and maintain than a simple forced air system (my last garage use a forced air electric heater).
Thanks as always for the help.

