B&H
Well-known member
Hello,
I own a 2-bay auto repair shop in Central New York. This summer, I had the floor replaced and installed radiant floor heat with a Buderus boiler.
We removed the ancient hanging gas forced air heater.
I'm not sure the radiant heat is going to be enough when it gets really cold, and the 2 overhead doors open to let in frozen, snow-covered cars. I will have to wait and see on that.
Right now, I am concerned with what to do in regards to the floor heat, as the temperature slowly marches downward heading toward winter. The nighttime lows are in the 30's, and the daytime highs are in the 50's and 60's.
We need heat in the morning, but by noon, really would like to open the doors and enjoy the remaining fall warmth. The same thing is going to happen in the spring.
In the meantime, does anyone have any suggestions on what to do during this temperature transition time? Keep the boiler on at a lower setting, turn it on/off like we did with forced air, add another forced-air unit, or ???
Thanks!
I own a 2-bay auto repair shop in Central New York. This summer, I had the floor replaced and installed radiant floor heat with a Buderus boiler.
We removed the ancient hanging gas forced air heater.
I'm not sure the radiant heat is going to be enough when it gets really cold, and the 2 overhead doors open to let in frozen, snow-covered cars. I will have to wait and see on that.
Right now, I am concerned with what to do in regards to the floor heat, as the temperature slowly marches downward heading toward winter. The nighttime lows are in the 30's, and the daytime highs are in the 50's and 60's.
We need heat in the morning, but by noon, really would like to open the doors and enjoy the remaining fall warmth. The same thing is going to happen in the spring.
In the meantime, does anyone have any suggestions on what to do during this temperature transition time? Keep the boiler on at a lower setting, turn it on/off like we did with forced air, add another forced-air unit, or ???
Thanks!