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heating cost. floor vs. air

Dave Maxwell

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Kickapoo illinois
After alot of reading I'm still confused. I am getting ready for a floor in my 42x72x16. Other than some loft area it will be mostly open. What is the most cost effective after install price. . Forced air or in floor water heat the garage will be used four or morenightsa week until I go full time. Then it will be daily.
 
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jack stand

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My experience is with each is that with the tall ceiling height, all of your hot air rises up against it and then is needed to be blown back down with ceiling fans. For economics, I kept the shop at around 60 and that was fine for winter clothing season but when you blow that 60 deg air back down from the tall ceiling, it became more of a cold draft! Not to mention that an Nascar pit team could not get the doors open and closed fast enough to not loose at least an hours's worth of heat (recovery time) and a cold slab on your feet.
Now with radiant, (in a different shop) none of the above problems are an issue, and the same 60ish setting feels much warmer, and just about tee shirt only! It's hard to explain, but with the heat under you and radiating up at you, the same temp's just feel better/warmer. Another efficiency factor that I had not given much thought to before I went with radiant is that when heating with hot air, you're dealing with 180? deg. air (I'm not a hvac guy), but with radiant heat your water temps are only about 110 deg, that's not very hot water to be making heat from! I heat my water with a wood gasification boiler, but have a high efficiency regular oil fired hot water heater as a backup. Your options for boilers and fuels are pretty wide open. The only downside that there might be to radiant slab heat is that it is not going to respond to thermostat adjustments quickly. That mass of 'crete that keeps you warm after the doors were left up for 20 min. takes days to get up to operating temps at the start of the season (ok maybe not days but it depends what temp's you start to warm your slab up from). It is common to put 2" of ridgid foam under a heated slab, and I would suggest that every dollar you spend on insulation on the rest of the bldg. is money well spent. It is said and very true that insulation is the gift that keeps on giving! I love my slab heat!
And the super insulation holds true for any type of heating/cooling system.
 
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jack stand

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What about overhead radiant tube heaters? Less cost than a heated floor and way more efficient than air.

No experiance on my part, but I'd miss my toasty slab. I really think that warm slab has a lot to do with the overall comfort. (of the floor radiant). Those gas(?) radiant heaters at H. Depot checkout sure do feel good though. :thumbup:
 

KPSquared

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I'm only into my radiant for $1200. In floor heat was a huge expense that I would never recover in efficiency. (based on quotes I got)

20 foot long tube, natural gas burner in one end. 75000 btu's, no air movement, still heats up the slab.
 
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Dave Maxwell

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I got a forced air unit from last shop. Probably not big enough for new place. Thought about Puting tube in floor and have it in case I ever do get the components to finish. The insulation under the floor though is 3,000 alone.
 

Shop Specialties

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Grass Range, MT
You only need 1/3 of the BTU for in-floor as compared to forced air. Overhead radiant tubes are great if you just want heat under them. If you generate waste oil you will have free heat and be eligible for a up to $ 1.80 per square foot Federal tax credit. You want to check to see if there are any state tax credits available for going waste oil. Here in Montana if you go in-floor with a waste oil boiler the tax credit is 25% the cost of the total job.
 
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D

Dave Maxwell

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Can I cool my shop at all in summer with it. I have been reading online about hydronic heating systems. I will do the install myself. Have a friend that can get me a boiler
 

Dick in Wisconsin

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Now this is interesting.

KPSquared is from Canada, a new miles south of Edmonton, Alberta. I presume its pretty cold up there in the winter and the winter is kinda long.

Dave is in Illinois ... about the same latitude as Indianapolis, IN. The winters are much shorter (I am 25 miles north of Milwaukee) and probably don't have the temperature extremes as KPS has to deal with.

Dave probably needs A/C almost as much as he needs heat!!!!! I will be interested to hear how far south the guys are putting water radiant heat in the floor.

Jack Stand is up in Maine ... north of Dave but well south of KPS. It will be interesting how the length and the severity of the heating season of these three locations will impact the heating decision. I suspect that a full-time operation vs a weekend warrior will make a difference too.

I've also heard from a poster on the Truck Conversion form that in a garage with high ceiling where the guy was working on his truck conversion and was alway well up off the floor that it was "cool up there".

The comment about insulation being the gift that keeps on giving is very, very appropriate. There is of course a point of diminishing returns for insulation (especially in the floor), but insulation and eliminating air infiltration are extremely important. Extremely important; especially at the energy costs we're talking about today.

Can I cool my shop at all in summer with it.

I presume you're talking about cooling the water in the floor. If you do that, instant pond. You'll have condensation on the floor, especially where you live I think it gets pretty humid.
 
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crazy wheel

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That's what I'm wondering. Will I ever get my cost back

Don't want to take this off topic, but since the OP asked.....

why does everyone expect to recover their cost on hvac systems?
do you recover the cost on your house, car, tv?????

For example;
I could buy a VW for $XXXXX.** and get ZZ mpg

Or I could buy a Caddy for $XXXXXX.** and get ZZmpg

will I recover the cost of the Caddy, if it is more luxurious????

I can't say that I have ever heard anyone ask this about cars, they might brag about fuel mileage, but never say that I saved so much gas I recouped my cost.....
 
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Dave Maxwell

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Good point on the cost back. I'm just looking at heat is heat. Is the extra expensive worth it. Will it cost less to run and maintain over the next twenty years
 

jvitez

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+1 on insulation. Whatever system you use, the better insulated the structure the less energy will be used however you generate the heat. The less heat loss, the less important type of heating system becomes as the marginal cost differences are reduced by needing less heat in the first place.

It's not always about cost, but also about comfort. Everyone says in-loor radiant is by far the most comfortable, and uses the least energy. But, it's a capital cost vs operating cost issue too.

Cheapest to install: toss up between forced air unit heaters and tube radiant heaters, depending on local costs. Most expensive: in-floor radiant.

Cheapest operating cost: in-floor radiant. Second is tube radiant, most expensive is fan forced unit heater. You pay your money, you take your choice.
 
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What about overhead radiant tube heaters? Less cost than a heated floor and way more efficient than air.

I looked as those. Seems the draw back is they run hot at the burner end and cool at the far end. But this can be overcome with how you place them. I also did not like the clearances I would have to maintain. For me in the floor is still the right choice.
 
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Dave Maxwell

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Looks like in floor radiant is the thing for me over the long run. Have a forced air unit now I can use until I get all the parts for the in floor.
 

koditten

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Midland, Michigan
I never expect to recover the cost of my infloor heat system. Regardless, keeping the shop at 50* is not that expensive in relation to the comfort. 50*shop temp=60-68* floor temp in my shop. I love having warm feet. The older I get, the more this is noticed.

I have a small wood stove that I use to bring the temp up warmer if I desire, which isn't often.

The 100 bucks a mouth that I pay for gas, 4 months out of the year is an easy bill to pay.

KO
 
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jack stand

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Looks like in floor radiant is the thing for me over the long run. Have a forced air unit now I can use until I get all the parts for the in floor.

I DIY all my radiant. Had a radiant design co. do the design work, they provided detailed working drawings that were simple to follow. The materials that go in the slab are pretty cheap, even if you were to not complete the system right away or ever. You're bldg. would be ready for radiant for ever! In a shop, I would not be concerned as much with the professional design as I would if there were living space involved, like I have. There are free heat loss programs on the internet for figuring those numbers into your design and lots of tube spacing/legnth of "loops" etc. info out there as well. I kinda figured when I was questioning myself about the radiant decision, that what money I spent extra on any radiant cost was way offset by the fact that I would have not been able to install the alternate (conventional) heat my self, and would have paid for that labor any way.
 
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Dave Maxwell

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OK now insulation. I have been looking at the stuff designed for metal buildings. To get a decent r value it is 8 inches thick. I have 2x6 walls. Can it be compressed or does that diminish it capacity? Also the rolled under slab blankets. Are they any good. Big price difference. 600 compared to 3000 for foam board
 

Highbeam

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The R-value for batts is uncompressed unless specified clearly. It is the dead air space between the fibers that gives you the R-value. If you squish it you squish teh dead air space and lose R-value.
 

jvitez

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Insulation works by trapping air. It's the air that's the actual insulator. DO NOT COMPRESS INSULATION! The air pockets are compressed, reducing the R-value of what you just paid for.

What I used for my 2x6 walls is Roxul.

http://www.roxul.com/residential/products/roxul+comfortbatt™

It's mineral wool, R22 vs R20 for a 2x6 wall, is waterproof, fireproof, dusty to install but no fibreglass itch! For your more moderate climate, R40 ceiling and R20-22 walls would be reasonable, but if you float the note, put 1.5 inches of foam board (extruded or expanded polystyrene, XPS or EPS) over the whole outside wall sheathing. It will act as a thermal break so the stud don't lose or gain heat via conduction. The more you insulate, the cheaper the heating cost for a permanently conditioned structure.
 

jack stand

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Check out this place http://www.insulationdepot.com/ I have bought from them a few times. They had a warehouse within my reasonable travel distance and picked it up my self. I believe in foam over a "batt" type insulation, but it is expensive. This link makes foam affordable. I have 2x6 walls with a 2x6 purlin to screw the (exterior) metal to. One layer of 1 1/2" polyiso between the purlins on the outside of the stud wall, then a vertical layer in the stud bay, leaving enough room for 3 5/8 fg to complete the wall. Roughly 3" iso @ r-6+ per inch = r 18, and the fg. at r-13, it is at least a r-24 wall. I sealed all the edges of the ridgid foam with the foam gun to eliminate air flow (very important,especially with all "batt" type insulation. If money were no object, I would have had it spray foamed full cavity.
I also like jvitez ideas above.
 
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JakeKohl

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Feb 23, 2012
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Greenville, SC
My experience is with each is that with the tall ceiling height, all of your hot air rises up against it and then is needed to be blown back down with ceiling fans. For economics, I kept the shop at around 60 and that was fine for winter clothing season but when you blow that 60 deg air back down from the tall ceiling, it became more of a cold draft! Not to mention that an Nascar pit team could not get the doors open and closed fast enough to not loose at least an hours's worth of heat (recovery time) and a cold slab on your feet.
Now with radiant, (in a different shop) none of the above problems are an issue, and the same 60ish setting feels much warmer, and just about tee shirt only! It's hard to explain, but with the heat under you and radiating up at you, the same temp's just feel better/warmer. Another efficiency factor that I had not given much thought to before I went with radiant is that when heating with hot air, you're dealing with 180? deg. air (I'm not a hvac guy), but with radiant heat your water temps are only about 110 deg, that's not very hot water to be making heat from! I heat my water with a wood gasification boiler, but have a high efficiency regular oil fired hot water heater as a backup. Your options for boilers and fuels are pretty wide open. The only downside that there might be to radiant slab heat is that it is not going to respond to thermostat adjustments quickly. That mass of 'crete that keeps you warm after the doors were left up for 20 min. takes days to get up to operating temps at the start of the season (ok maybe not days but it depends what temp's you start to warm your slab up from). It is common to put 2" of ridgid foam under a heated slab, and I would suggest that every dollar you spend on insulation on the rest of the bldg. is money well spent. It is said and very true that insulation is the gift that keeps on giving! I love my slab heat!
And the super insulation holds true for any type of heating/cooling system.

Also note that foam under the slab is not code in several southern states...the termites, though they don't consume it, appear to enjoy living in it. After I ran the heat calcs, I was rather disappointed to learn that I couldn't put foam in the ground under my pad in SC.
 

jack stand

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Also note that foam under the slab is not code in several southern states...the termites, though they don't consume it, appear to enjoy living in it. After I ran the heat calcs, I was rather disappointed to learn that I couldn't put foam in the ground under my pad in SC.

Will they let you use it if you (bug) treat the soil/gravel etc. before you lay out the foam? A layer of poly is recomended under the foam for a MB, I would think that would keep them out of the foam as well. Interesting.
 

Steevo

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Yeah, that 75K BTU Mr Heater I have in my 1000 sq/ft shop maxes out at $45/mo in the coldest months of winter, which is Dec/Jan/Feb/Mar, with Dec and Mar being less than $45/mo. That's keeping it at a nice working temp full time, 24/7.
I can't see ever finding a lower (operating) cost solution that didn't have such a high capital cost that it would not pay back in my lifetime.
Of course, the larger the building, the bigger the difference between heating options, so the OP's 48K cu/ft building might benefit from solutions that would never be cost effective in my 11K cu/ft shop.
 
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gooned

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B.C.
so I'm still planing on two unit heaters with a pair of ceiling fans for my "weekend use" 1000sf shop up here in B.C.
I have been told that the cost of keeping the thing warm 24/7 with slab boiler on nat gas would kill me $$$wise. At least with electric I can set it for a min value paint etc will store and just get it hotter when I'm out there.

Keep those comments coming guys :thumbup:
 

sneezer41

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reflectix is a scam


I would be surprised if foam underslab is actually against code. There is certainly an issue with termites and carpenter ants, but I am sure there is a way around it
 

JakeKohl

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reflectix is a scam


I would be surprised if foam underslab is actually against code. There is certainly an issue with termites and carpenter ants, but I am sure there is a way around it

Exterior foundation foam / soil contact is against code in South Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, and Texas. You can encapsulate it in concrete and it appears that you might be able to put it under a slab (i.e., not external) - but even that has shown instances of infestation.

5th paragraph down:
http://dow-styrofoam.custhelp.com/a...-termite-concerns-when-using-foam-insulation?

top of 4th page:
http://www.ornl.gov/sci/roofs+walls/insulation/fact sheets/slab insulation technology.pdf

footnote on page 8:
http://www.ornl.gov/sci/roofs+walls/insulation/fact sheets/slab insulation technology.pdf
 
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Shop Specialties

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Grass Range, MT
You only need 1/3 of the BTU to heat the slab as compared to forced air. Once the slab is hot it takes very little to maintain it especially when the doors are shut.

2 forced air units to only heat 1,000 sq ft ?
 

dirttracker18

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Slate River, ON
Totally worth the extra expense for me to have in floor.

After having it I would not have it any other way. I keep my shop at 55° air temp and it feels much warmer than thay after a few minutes in there. Working on the floor is great and working up high is virtually the same temp as near the floor.

A big plus is opening and closing the service door in winter. A minute after the door is closed it feels the same again, and no wind from a heater blowing **** all over the shop and overheating me while it is on.

Was afraid of that. Trying to get good r value in my walls. What is a good value. Maybe I am wanting to much

It is more important to make sure you seal the place up good. Ensure you do your best to seal everything up well, accoustic sealant at the bottom, plastic boxes around all electrical, tape up all seams, etc.

Snow melts off vehicles faster and melts from the underside, unlike having hanger units which can takes days to warm up under the vehicle.
 

Perryk

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Billings, Montana
You only need 1/3 of the BTU for in-floor as compared to forced air. Overhead radiant tubes are great if you just want heat under them. If you generate waste oil you will have free heat and be eligible for a up to $ 1.80 per square foot Federal tax credit. You want to check to see if there are any state tax credits available for going waste oil. Here in Montana if you go in-floor with a waste oil boiler the tax credit is 25% the cost of the total job.



Interesting theory on the tube heater.....I have been in some big shops using a radiant tube and it felt warm all over...

Waste oil is a serious pain in the ***, it stinks, and is always messy. Plus I looked at the cost of a boiler...$5000+ on top of the pex/manifold/styrofam insulation...thats a $10 000 heating system that requires you to constantly deal with dirty, skunk smelling waste oil?...no thanks.

I know you are into selling, servicing, rebuilding waste oil equipment. Great for a diesel shop, but for the average guy the its not worth the hassle.
 

gooned

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B.C.
2 forced air units to only heat 1,000 sq ft ?

Yeah but only the "construction heater" little 4KW portables, put em on a shelf and you can throw them on the ground if your under something in the winter. By far the cheapest up front cost, and I REALLY doubt in floor heat 24/7 is that cheap to run - I am STILL running the house furnace this year with the cold wet spring here...
 
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