akpolaris
Well-known member
So if I put radiant heat in a cement floor and lose power to keep the water heated for an extended period of time and the water freezes what happens? To manage that risk can glycol be used in that system?? Thanks
That's the idea behind using glycol, as far as I know.
But what would actually happen? The pex is supposed to be quite resistant to damage from freeze. The valves, boiler, pumps, etc. are not.
That is why we use at least 2" of rigid foam under the poured concrete slab, colder climate guys sometimes use 4" to give us a good thermal break between the heated floor and the cold earth. Our goal here is to just heat the slab so we also install a thermal break between the heated slab and the stem wall foundation also. I have 21 cubic yards of 4000 psi 6" concrete in mine which is about 42 tons of thermal mass. No source of ignition in the garage as the hot water comes in from the house. Once the slab is warm, it stays warm with little additional heat added to it. It takes 1 hour to heat the building 1º F. I turn it on at Thanksgiving and off in April.
I keep the garage at 55º F (air temp 4' up the wall) which is very comfortable and cost effective. The floor is about 5º warmer than that.
I keep the house at 65º F (air temp 4' up the wall) with radiant floor heat in the wooden floor with foil and R-19 insulation under it in the crawlspace. The floor is about 5º warmer than that.
I am into pretty good insulation foam in the house and my garage is made of SIPs. Money well spent.
I heat 1200 square feet of house and 1200 square feet of garage with a propane fired Baxi Boiler that gives domestic hot water. Water goes out at about 115º and returns at about 90º. I also have a gas kitchen stove. I go through about 600 gallons of propane a year x $2.49 a gallon. Not bad in my book. Better than any of my neighbors with no garage.
Ah, the foam, that makes sense.
But at the same time, thermal mass doesnt really save money, it just means you dont have the option to turn it off and on when you're using it. It saves money in a house because your house takes all day to heat up in the summer and then your AC gets to operate at night time, which is not during peak hours and is generally cooler.
I thought the only reason radiant floor heat was energy efficient was because it allowed for lower boiler temps, which is more efficient. But I can appreciate the lack of an open flame.
Definitely has its benefits, but I dont think its really saving any money. Probably more expensive since it is running all winter. The slab staying warm for a long time doesnt really decrease fuel usage from any other method of heating.
Wouldn't radiant floor heat in a garage be a bad idea since you are effectively heating the earth?
In a house, like in the 1st floor flooring, heat transfer can go any direction as heat absorbed by the basement air will rise, making it insignificant. In a radiant floor thats directly attached to the earth, heat doesn't really rise when its transfered through solid surfaces, atleast not that I know of. It would seem to me that the earth would be absorbing a small but significant pecentage of that heat, enough to make it a poor option atleast.
Also, having a high thermal mass in a space which is not used for living space would seem like a poor option as it will cost an arm and a leg to get up to temp. All that money would be heating that place while your sleeping. You heated up that slab only to not need it.