by Pops » Sun 18 Jan 2015, 10:59:34
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Peak_Yeast', '
')There can be a "subjective" difference between the different kinds of simple resistive heating elements.
What i mean is that for example some are made as a big plate that radiates the heat which can make the place feel warmer than it actually is.
According to some people electrical floor heating is the least efficient - I am not sure about that. But i can see that the rules concerning floor heating requires 25% extra insulation in the floor here in Denmark.
Radiant heat - to be obvious - heats things via radiation (like sunshine) rather than via convection (hot air). So if you sit in front of a radiant heater (the oil filled electric, the wood stove, the sunny window) it is you that heats up, not the air around you. This is what makes radiant floors so comfortable, the floor of course is warm to the touch but it radiates heat to everything in the room, everything you touch is warm, and it does it without overheating the air. The best part is, instead of the heated air rising and pooling at the ceiling where it is basically wasted, near the floor is the warmest. Your toes are toasty while up at head-height the temperature is mild.
The same of course is true of a radiant space heater, like all "light", heat waves decline in strength at the square of distance (or some such nonesense) which is why you "huddle around the fire."
I built a house in the '80's with hydronic in floor heat, plastic pipe embedded in lightweight concrete on a wood floor with ceramic tile finish. It was the best heat I've ever had and I eventually installed it under the carpeted areas (no concrete) as well. I insulated the floor with batts, foil faced, face up.
Insulating floors is important but almost impossible to do right with fiberglass, I'm sure those batts I installed in the '80s are on the ground by now, those that aren't are sagging and filled with mouse poop. To be effective, the insulation needs to be tight against the vapor barrier and not compressed, pretty hard if not impossible to do upside down with speedwires.
I have an old house built over several decades, floor joists go from 2x4 @ 24" O/C to 2x6 on 16". The hot decorator item today is old wood floors and we definitely got 'em! Only part is t&g so at night if I leave the basment lights on it's like walking on stars, LOL.
I think about the best thing for me to do, expensive, but not as much as spray foam (which has to come in from long distance here) is to put up rigid foam panels between the joists.
Thermax is R-10 for 1-1/2", fire rated, foil faced. Two layers (R-19 is code now) it is about $3 sq ft tho ... OTOH a new floor starts at $5 s/f.
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)