nvbigblue
Well-known member
{EDIT} Ooops... this probably should have been under Heating & A/C, and I see some else posted almost the same question there, so my search foo must be weak today. hehe.. MODS, please move as needed.
Hey guys,
I searched around but didn't find anything...
So my county has gotten on an engineering kick as of late..... when I discussed my building plans with them, they insisted that the concrete layout be signed off by an engineer. No problem, they came with my building
, however, as soon as I mentioned the possibility of adding insulation and PEX for in-floor heating, they said this would require a new set of plans, since none of this is on my current plans. Even after explaining to them that PEX is basically the same as a water pipe or power conduit in concrete, and the dirt work would be changed to keep the slab thickness the same, so nothing on grade would be changing, they stuck with with that decision. It appears their main concern is that the plans call for a solid slab, not a slab separated from the footings by the insulation. The fact that the rebar is tied into the footings didn't seem to matter.
I don't know if I would ever use the in-floor tubing, but of course, it a little easier to install it during the pour.
So one of my neighbors suggested just laying (tying) the PEX down on top of the rebar prior to the pour, but after the dirt work inspection
. So the question is, is it worth the effort to do this without any insulation below the slab and along the footings? Or would I just be dumping heat ($$) needlessly into the ground?
The building won't be going up until early next year, so all of this may change by then....
I did not have a chance to actually speak to one of the inspectors...this was the office staff.
Thanks for the input!
NV
Hey guys,
I searched around but didn't find anything...
So my county has gotten on an engineering kick as of late..... when I discussed my building plans with them, they insisted that the concrete layout be signed off by an engineer. No problem, they came with my building
I don't know if I would ever use the in-floor tubing, but of course, it a little easier to install it during the pour.
So one of my neighbors suggested just laying (tying) the PEX down on top of the rebar prior to the pour, but after the dirt work inspection The building won't be going up until early next year, so all of this may change by then....
I did not have a chance to actually speak to one of the inspectors...this was the office staff.
Thanks for the input!
NV
Last edited:
