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radiant heated floor

bostssgt

Member
Joined
Sep 3, 2012
Messages
20
Location
Quebec Canada
i plan to heat my 36x40 16ft ceilling garage with a radiant floor with an electric 40 gal water heater

is that enough powerful? the winters here are cold, from 0deg C to -30 deg C... i want to keep the shop at 12 to 15 deg
 
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koditten

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Apr 10, 2008
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5,528
Location
Midland, Michigan
I don't see that working too good for you. You must be in Canada.

That is a pretty big area to heat with limited BTU's.

Gonna be a huge elec bill.

Others will chime in.
 

tdkkart

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Joined
Jun 17, 2006
Messages
6,887
Location
Eastern Iowa
i plan to heat my 36x40 16ft ceilling garage with a radiant floor with an electric 40 gal water heater

is that enough powerful? the winters here are cold, from 0deg C to -30 deg C... i want to keep the shop at 12 to 15 deg


Simply put, no.
Without discussion about the suitability of a "water heater" as a heat source, the simple fact is that a 40 gallon heater cannot produce enough BTU's to heat your space. As far as I know, all residential electric water heaters use (2) 4500 watt elements. Even if you wire them together for 9000w you still don't have enough BTU's for your space.

You'll need to look into an electric boiler.
 

philjafo

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Joined
Aug 31, 2012
Messages
244
Simply put, no.
Without discussion about the suitability of a "water heater" as a heat source, the simple fact is that a 40 gallon heater cannot produce enough BTU's to heat your space. As far as I know, all residential electric water heaters use (2) 4500 watt elements. Even if you wire them together for 9000w you still don't have enough BTU's for your space.

You'll need to look into an electric boiler.

Yeah what he said, also unless someone else is paying the electric bill I would highly recommend Nat gas or propane. The initial cost is higher but radiant floor is best if kept at a constant temp and electric is the most expensive heat. It's also cheaper to do something right the first time then it is to redo it in a few years because your unhappy with the systems performance.
 
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bostssgt

Member
Joined
Sep 3, 2012
Messages
20
Location
Quebec Canada
thank you guys!
i'm in Quebec Canada, price of gaz/petrol/wood/ect... is high, and the difference between electricity and others energy source is not so big

i will look for an electric boiler
 

BadgerBoilerMN

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Joined
Aug 4, 2011
Messages
837
Location
Minneapolis
First, let us start with - dare I suggest - a proper heat load analysis. This is the only way for the layman or professional to size a boiler for the best results.
 
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Highbeam

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Joined
Feb 15, 2011
Messages
2,292
Location
Mt Rainier foothills, WA
First, let us start with - dare I suggest - a proper heat load analysis. This is the only way for the layman or professional to size a boiler for the best results.

A guy needs to know how much heat he will need when selecting the heating equipment for sure. Maybe you can even hire a fancy company to do it for you.

Please post back. It will be interesting to see what btu rate you actually need and how close the water heater was.

I do not buy into the theory that electric is always the most costly. In many areas, mine included, electric is the same or cheaper than other fuels on a btu basis.
 
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bostssgt

Member
Joined
Sep 3, 2012
Messages
20
Location
Quebec Canada
i emailed a company for a heat load analys and they estimated for all the stuff needed...

local company said:
Une chaudière électriques de marque Thermolec d’une capacité de 18 KW modulante en rapport avec la température extérieure;

18kwatts with modulating temp :shocking:
 

jayoldschool

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 23, 2006
Messages
2,119
Location
Canada
Hydro is sooooo cheap in QC.

BTW, that is the exact size of my garage that is radiant heated. Oil fired boiler. Garage is insulated R40.
 

BadgerBoilerMN

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 4, 2011
Messages
837
Location
Minneapolis
The Thermolec quoted is likely 3x too big for the load, but we install Thermolec electric boilers here in the States and you are on the right track. Find a good heat load, they look like this:
 

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