11 Mar 2010 @ 8:39 AM 
 

Radiant Floor Heat Proffers Tippytoe Comfort

 

Your partner got up in the middle of the night and right away those cold toes are invading your territory with the tenacity of a heat-seeking projectile. Fortuitous for you, the new home will have radiant floor heating – a dependable remedy for meetings with cold feet at 2 a.m. or a midwinter chill that reaches your bone marrow.

Under-floor heat has been used since the Roman Empire when it existed in its prime in communal buildings and the villas of the wealthy. Hot air was distributed below tile or brick, supplying a radiant heat – energy that channeled heat through the flooring and on to colder objects like Roman reclining chairs, statues, marble-topped tables and frosty centurions.

With the coming of elastic PEX pipe in the United States in the 1980s, application has jumped as new products have been developed for the construction industry – among which have been hydronic arrangements to supply radiant floor heating. Unlike forced-air furnaces, contemporary water floor schemes employing PEX plumbing products furnish more consistent warmth to a room, are less drying, more effective and a whole lot quieter than aging furnaces or metal steam pipes.

PEX tubing is constructed of cross-linked polyethylene, which generates these modern tubes durability, chemical resistance, high mobility, a cost-efficient installment profile and larger temperature range. This polyethylene tubing can be used with water as hot as 200 degrees Fahrenheit in heating arrangements.

There are several methods of installing radiant floor heat. Some use electrical line voltage systems, but easy-to-use PEX hosing products have made hydronic under-floor heat popular with both house builders and home owners. Because the piping is so elastic, its coils can be employed in a straight distance, getting rid of the requirement for multiple joints and fittings.

Many radiant floor heat arrangements employ oxygen-barrier PEX radiant tubing applied in gypsum concrete. Others comprise low-mass underlay – wood boards with recessed niches for flexible piping.

Each remodeling or new-construction project is well suited by one application or another, so investigate your hydronic floor heating choices fully. Do your homework!

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Tags Categories: OpenBook Posted By: Stephen
Last Edit: 11 Mar 2010 @ 08 39 AM

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