tenthousandfeet
Member
I'm looking at all the possibilities for heat in my 20x22 this winter, and I keep coming back to solar hydronic. The biggest problem, of course, is that the garage is already built!
I've searched and searched, but I can't find any reference to somebody adding infloor radiant to an existing building. Probably the only way to do so is to cut up the floor and pour a new one, but that would be both costly and time consuming. I've also toyed with the idea of pouring a couple of inches extra on top of the slab, but the heat likely wouldn't permeate the slab underneath (not to mention the fragility of such a thin layer, and the lack of insulation under the slab).
Another thought for taking advantage of the sun as a heat source would be a wall-mounted water radiator of some sort, but without the slab to hold the heat during hours of darkness this would only really work during the day.
Any thoughts? Am I stuck cutting out the slab if I really want free(ish) heat?
I've searched and searched, but I can't find any reference to somebody adding infloor radiant to an existing building. Probably the only way to do so is to cut up the floor and pour a new one, but that would be both costly and time consuming. I've also toyed with the idea of pouring a couple of inches extra on top of the slab, but the heat likely wouldn't permeate the slab underneath (not to mention the fragility of such a thin layer, and the lack of insulation under the slab).
Another thought for taking advantage of the sun as a heat source would be a wall-mounted water radiator of some sort, but without the slab to hold the heat during hours of darkness this would only really work during the day.
Any thoughts? Am I stuck cutting out the slab if I really want free(ish) heat?