Under Floor Heating
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- skiking
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Under Floor Heating
I'm going to lay some laminate and I'm after some advice on UFH. The room is only 12m sq and is concrete with a bitchumen layer base (I assume its bitchumen ). I intend floating the laminate with an underlay/dpm.
OK, here is what I'm after :-
1) Am I on the right lines with the above.
2) Can UFH be used with laminate and if so are there any laminates types you can't use.
3) How is the UFH connected to the electrics i.e plugged in, direct to the cu, or part of the ring main - sparky will be doing this just need to understand whats involved.
Finally, what are peoples experience of UFH - does it provide good heat, is it efficient etc.
Thanks.
OK, here is what I'm after :-
1) Am I on the right lines with the above.
2) Can UFH be used with laminate and if so are there any laminates types you can't use.
3) How is the UFH connected to the electrics i.e plugged in, direct to the cu, or part of the ring main - sparky will be doing this just need to understand whats involved.
Finally, what are peoples experience of UFH - does it provide good heat, is it efficient etc.
Thanks.
- big-all
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- skiking
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big-all - this is one of the things I'm trying to understand. I already have a radiator in the room that is underspec'd (for a reason ). I did a bit of a google last night and the manufacturers were saying UFH can be used as primary heating and gave drawings to demonstrate it over a radiator. As I don't trust a word a salesman says and I treat manufacturers info with a certain amount of scepticism I was seeing if anyone on here has first hand experience of its effectiveness.
- big-all
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the trouble is with underfloor heating is its indirect heat you have to warm up the elements then the floor [which is quite a good insulator]skiking wrote:big-all - this is one of the things I'm trying to understand. I already have a radiator in the room that is underspec'd (for a reason ). I did a bit of a google last night and the manufacturers were saying UFH can be used as primary heating and gave drawings to demonstrate it over a radiator. As I don't trust a word a salesman says and I treat manufacturers info with a certain amount of scepticism I was seeing if anyone on here has first hand experience of its effectiveness.
so by the time you have warmed the floor to the max and deducted say 20percent lost heat your probably taking 30 mins then possibly another hour or so to start warming the room to a decent temperature thats all assuming its giving out probably about 6kw
where as a 3kw fan heater would warm the room in say 20 mins
we are all ------------------still learning
- skiking
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You appear to have the same thoughts on UFH as me big-all. I'm suspicious that the heating element has to produce a lot more heat to compensate for the dpm and laminate being on top of it this is why I want some feedback from someone who has UFH with laminate or even with a tiled floor. Is it efficient, energy wise, and can it be used as a primary heat source as stated by the manufacturers.
- big-all
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my suggestion would be to do an in room calculation for what size of gas central heating radiator required to heat your room [kw output]
then do the same calculation to see what size of mats you need [kw output]
then compare like with like
when you think a kw at gas prices are around 3p per usable kw of heat as compared to around 8p for electric per kw and if you loose 20 or 30 percent in getting the heat through the floor your talking 10p per kw or around 3 times the running costs
then do the same calculation to see what size of mats you need [kw output]
then compare like with like
when you think a kw at gas prices are around 3p per usable kw of heat as compared to around 8p for electric per kw and if you loose 20 or 30 percent in getting the heat through the floor your talking 10p per kw or around 3 times the running costs
we are all ------------------still learning
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The key to UFH heating being successful is to have a very well insulated house, personally I think it has to be insulated to a level which is at least up to current building regs and preferably significantly better. If it is installed on an uninsulated concrete slab you'll find that you're doing very little more than heating the ground!
It sounds like your floor is an older type solid concrete? If so you may find that laying just an inch or two of PU insulation with a floating floor above will make it perfectly comfortable with your existing radiator; as long as you can cope with the change in floor level.
It sounds like your floor is an older type solid concrete? If so you may find that laying just an inch or two of PU insulation with a floating floor above will make it perfectly comfortable with your existing radiator; as long as you can cope with the change in floor level.