1956chevy210
Member
- Joined
- Dec 2, 2015
- Messages
- 18
So my shop floor isn't thick enough for concrete anchors so I'm going to go the hard route: Cut out sections of the floor where the lift posts go and pour them deeper. Yay! More on this some other day in a new post lol.
My biggest problem is that I have in-floor heat. My system uses 9 separate loops (circuits?) of PEX line that come of the brass hot water distro block and into the floor and run their course through the shop before returning to the boiler. I will have to cut through some of these to pour new lift pads. It's not avoidable. I'm not sure how many loops I will lose because I haven't mapped every loop, but I think it's about 3. So, I'll lose 30% of my heating of my heating capability. Again, that is only a guess at this point.
**My question is once I've cut through the lines and removed the old concrete, is there some way to repair the hot water loops so I actually don't lose any heating capability? Can PEX to PEX lines be connected like PVC pipe is connected with fittings and PVC cement? The PEX will be cut off flush with the vertical side of the concrete hole but maybe I can stick a fitting into it and glue it in place? The PEX lines are connected to the brass distro block with special hose clamps.
As a side note if the lines can be repaired I can either A) short circuit the loop by using one piece of PEX to connect the feed line to the return line, or B) use 2 pieces of PEX line to replace both of the removed sections of line so the loops continue their entire original courses. I'll just have to make sure to place the new lines off to the edge of the new concrete pads and away from where the anchors will go.
Thanks for reading!
1956chevy210
My biggest problem is that I have in-floor heat. My system uses 9 separate loops (circuits?) of PEX line that come of the brass hot water distro block and into the floor and run their course through the shop before returning to the boiler. I will have to cut through some of these to pour new lift pads. It's not avoidable. I'm not sure how many loops I will lose because I haven't mapped every loop, but I think it's about 3. So, I'll lose 30% of my heating of my heating capability. Again, that is only a guess at this point.
**My question is once I've cut through the lines and removed the old concrete, is there some way to repair the hot water loops so I actually don't lose any heating capability? Can PEX to PEX lines be connected like PVC pipe is connected with fittings and PVC cement? The PEX will be cut off flush with the vertical side of the concrete hole but maybe I can stick a fitting into it and glue it in place? The PEX lines are connected to the brass distro block with special hose clamps.
As a side note if the lines can be repaired I can either A) short circuit the loop by using one piece of PEX to connect the feed line to the return line, or B) use 2 pieces of PEX line to replace both of the removed sections of line so the loops continue their entire original courses. I'll just have to make sure to place the new lines off to the edge of the new concrete pads and away from where the anchors will go.
Thanks for reading!
1956chevy210



