TRITOON
Well-known member
For two evenings a week, you will be throwing money and comfort away trying to do infloor heating. Hot air will warm up the area faster and save you quite a bit of money in the long term.
Hanging heaters like the BM are typically ~82% efficient.Don’t know the answer………but………the question is: if your system was just the hanging Beacon Morris* would the heating cost and heating effectiveness change for better or worse, knowing what you know would you spend the extra cost for in floor radiant ?
* given a larger btu unit 150k for the building size and climate
Hanging heaters like the BM are typically ~82% efficient.
The condensing boiler I am using is 95 or 96% efficient,
The cons to any high efficiency boiler or heater in an outbuilding include disposal of the condensate in extreme temperatures. You need some sort of drain that won’t freeze, which may be an issue.Alternative plan ?
95+ Propane ( NG) furnace for about $1000-$1500 DIY install. NOT run and or install two systems.
Enjoy the saving for 90 plus efficiency, set the your required temp, fast recovery from 50— 70*.
Shop duct work could be minimal to none.
Typical Hanging furnace $300-700, venting $200-500 estimate DIY install likely double for pro install ?
Yes, 90 plus furnace can not freeze and you have deal with condensate…….but…..same for 90 plus boiler as well.
I have a Beacon Morris 45k hanging heater in very well insulated 1000 sqft shop……..if I had to do over I would consider the high efficiency furnace. I estimate my NG cost to heat the shop to 55-60* in the coldest months is about a $1/day. Not outrageous by any measure. The 90 plus furnace is a demanding install ……often easier than hanging units.
Given the trend in energy cost …….currently we are likely at the lowest cost in years. The trend will be up and in some areas up quickly. Insulation and high efficiency are going to pay off in years to come.
There are many brands and HVAC a supply house selling units in the market, delivered to your door.
They can be pro installed as well. Some pros might not be real enthusiastic as they lost the sale and profit on the unit.
It takes perhaps a half hour to bring my shop from the low to mid forties with the hanging heater. The floor is relatively warm, from the radiant, so the low sixties, for me, is adequate.Thats what prompted my original post.. I would think that keeping the shop at 45 degrees all winter would be cheaper to do with in-floor heat than with a hanging heater. And then heating the air up to working temp would be easy after that for the evenings I want to work in there..
And with in-floor heat, do I maybe only need to heat the up to 60 degrees with the hanging heater since the slab and objects will be more comfortable?
All the pros of in-floor are making me lean toward it... Not exactly sure what the payoff is on it, but I suppose I could run the hanging heater only for a year or two and then hook up the in floor later and see what happens to my propane use. And the fact that propane is more expensive than NG means that the more efficient system will pay off faster.
One other thing keeps playing through my mind....I have yet to meet a single person that regrets running the lines in the floor - but I've met plenty that wished they would've because they can't go back and do it now.
Same here, I keep my radiant at 58F and the ambient is better that than that in the surrounding air.That is what I said here last week, I'm in Minnesota in a pole barn house, garage is at 67° all winter and floor is 68°-70°
Exactly.I live in a pole barn house, in floor heat in the house in floor heat in the garage, all winter long my garage is at 68° if I use my infrared heat gun the floor is at anywhere from 65° to 70°
My house has radiant. The overshoot is a big issue in the shoulder season when it gets cold a night but there is a big sun induced thermal load by late morning. It’s hot in the house and the floors are still emitting heat.1300 sqft using a simple Emerson thermostat and radiant heat. I’ve never ever seen the temp of the room overshoot the thermostat setting in the wall. You live in a pretty mild climate. Just do the radiant and leave the temp set to 60.
Thermal solar cannot compete against PV solar. Also, the costs of the storage tank, which has to be quite large and pumps, etc make it impractical. Thermal solar is ideal for radiant heat as your collector efficiency is so high due to the lower temps, but again, you get solar benefit only in the heating season. PV works yr round.Look up “the half plan” on the Internet.
Engineer guy wanted to cut his utility costs in half and had radiant heating system so he built solar collector/solar heating system.
Large box with black tubing in it, built onto the side of a shed facing the primary sun direction.
He was in show country so the angle was to shed the show. He bolt a solar collecting box painted black inside with black piping. Idea was to have the sun heat the water in the tubes part of the way and then let the furnace heat it the rest of the way as needed for the radiant system. For your system you likly only need the solar part of it and then add the space heating to bring the temp up for when you are working
You can get a duel temp control with a floor sensor. it's stop the floor from getting to hot ..... it.s a work around but will often helpMy house has radiant. The overshoot is a big issue in the shoulder season when it gets cold a night but there is a big sun induced thermal load by late morning. It’s hot in the house and the floors are still emitting heat.
Not an issue in mid winter when it stays cold all day and it’s overcast.
Already have a floor sensor.You can get a duel temp control with a floor sensor. it's stop the floor from getting to hot ..... it.s a work around but will often help
It would be a rare house built in the past 30 odd years w/o AC and radiant heat. Replacing the straight AC with a heat pump solves the shoulder season problem.Already have a floor sensor.
Easier to just use the mini split in the shoulder season, or get a small fire going in the wood burner for chilly mornings.
I had this problem. I added outdoor reset to my system and it helped a bunch.Already have a floor sensor.
Easier to just use the mini split in the shoulder season, or get a small fire going in the wood burner for chilly mornings.
Has he tried turning down the thermostat to a range where it's comfortable at should height?In floor heat is good for drying up water that’s on your floor. The problem with
It is regulating your air temperature with it. If your thermostat is wall mounted, by the time the slab warms up enough to make the stat turn off, it is hot enough that it will keep warming up the air and makes it too hot. You are better off going with a stat operated by a temperature probe in the floor itself. I would still go with radiant tho. My brother heats his whole house with in floor heat and he complains all the time, he wishes he had a forced air system.
I am building a pole barn home as well, what zone do you live in? Im in 6 in Western MT. The guy that I'm using to build my pole barn just did a pole house as well. He heats in floor and says his second story is heated only about degrees less than his lower level. I am building on the second level of mine not lower and considering heating with the in floor heat from the shop to the second story. What ya think.I live in a pole barn house, in floor heat in the house in floor heat in the garage, all winter long my garage is at 68° if I use my infrared heat gun the floor is at anywhere from 65° to 70°
I’m in zone 6 but real close to zone 7, but I don’t have a second floor. Climbed ladders all the time at work and didn’t want stairs when I retired.I am building a pole barn home as well, what zone do you live in? Im in 6 in Western MT. The guy that I'm using to build my pole barn just did a pole house as well. He heats in floor and says his second story is heated only about degrees less than his lower level. I am building on the second level of mine not lower and considering heating with the in floor heat from the shop to the second story. What ya think.
Well insulated slab w/ thermal break between slab & stem wall. You said this 4 years ago...what exactly does this mean ? Can you break it down for a layman?25 yrs. w/ exactly the combo you’re thinking about. Never looked back. NG makes the most economical choice. I keep it at 50*, turn on the Modine when I’m out there and very comfortable in a few minutes. Did have to replace the Grundfos pump cartridge once. That’s been it. Zone 5. Well insulated slab w/ thermal break between slab & stem wall.
Slab is poured on top of 3” of polystyrene. Then the in floor tubing is laid.