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Myson Low Line Convector

HFC
HFC Member Posts: 29
While I have the drywall removed I am considering

adding supplemental heat to a bedroom above our garage. The system will also be

supplying supplemental heating for the tile floor in our master bath and another

small bath. I am looking at the Myson low line convector line and my water

supply temp will be around 120˚F. Anybody here have experience with this line?

Would you recommend a different brand of convector for low temperature hydronic

supplemental heat?



<a href="http://www.myson.co.uk/products/lo_line_rc.asp">http://www.myson.co.uk/products/lo_line_rc.asp</a>



Thanks

Comments

  • SWEI
    SWEI Member Posts: 7,356
    why not radiant?

    Any particular reason you're looking at a convector?  Myson makes quite a range of plate radiators, many of which are quite affordable.



    Myson has charts with derating factors for various water supply temps.  Are you running outdoor reset?
  • HFC
    HFC Member Posts: 29
    I should have said fan convector

    Thank you for taking the time to respond. I should

    have stated I am considering their fan convector for supplemental heat. Specifically

    their Lo-Line 9-6RC. I will be running outdoor reset. Below is a picture of my

    panel and heat source. It has been a big challenge moving the water heater from

    the second floor to the garage. I ended up replumbing almost the entire house

    and there were many fire code issues to resolve.



    Again this is just for supplemental heat and our winters are not that cold.





  • Jean-David Beyer
    Jean-David Beyer Member Posts: 2,666
    What happens...

    What happens if the water in the square bucket freezes and the pressure relief valve opens and wants to discharge over pressure or over temperature water?



    What happens of the water in the square bucket freezes and condensate must be discharged from the hot water heater?
  • HFC
    HFC Member Posts: 29
    Your scenario will never occur

    The bucket is there to catch the condensate

    until I finish installing a sink to the left of the water heater and a standing

    pipe will be installed to the left of the sink. A condensate

    pump will be installed below the radiant expansion tank and the condensate

    will be pumped to an air gap attached to the top of the standing pipe. The

    discharge line for the TPR valve will just discharge to the floor when the

    installation is complete



    BTW, the temperature in our garage never gets low enough to freeze water and there is an expansion tank on the cold water supply line to the water heater.





  • SWEI
    SWEI Member Posts: 7,356
    rest of the system?

    Do you have room-by-room heat loss and radiation numbers?  What is the rest of the radiation like?  Outdoor reset curves for convectors are different than for radiation, though controls can make the two play nice together.  Still curious about the fan convector when the rest of the house is radiant.



    I'm guessing the power vented tank heats DHW and the X-block isolates the heating system from that?
  • NRT_Rob
    NRT_Rob Member Posts: 1,013
    I like Myson

    but the question is how is it triggerred? If it's second stage, and you won't need it until the water temp is over the minimum temp of the aquastat that allows the fan to run (standard on most units like this), then you're good to go. In fact if you can dial that aquastat to the water temp you'll need supplemental heat at, you might even skip external staging. but that's a tinker system.



    typically I would do a panel radiator sized for the max temp of the system and the supplemental load and let it vary its output with your reset curve.
    Rob Brown
    Designer for Rockport Mechanical
    in beautiful Rockport Maine.
  • HFC
    HFC Member Posts: 29
    Been Busy The Past Week

    Actually a high efficiency gas fireplace on the first floor will heat the house. Our

    neighbors with the same floor plan tell me they are happy with this

    arrangement. When we pulled all the drywall on the first floor doing other

    repairs we discovered significant structural damage done by the original

    plumbing contractor and serious code violations. I decided to redo the plumbing

    and move the water heater from the second floor to the garage. Since the

    ceiling was open and the floor under our master bath was open we thought we

    would install supplemental hydronic heating under the subfloor. The tile is

    cold in winter.



    When I removed some of the drywall in the garage to upgrade the plumbing I figured I

    would install the extra Joist Trak and PEX tubing left over from the master

    bath installation under the subfloor for a smaller bathroom over the garage.

    Again, just supplemental floor heat for the bathrooms.



    Then I started thinking it might be nice to have supplemental heat in the bedroom

    above the garage in case the fireplace downstairs is not sufficient on the

    coldest days. I saw Myson made a low temperature hydronic fan convector and

    thought it might be a good solution running the same water temperature as the

    floors.



    Since my last post I discovered a crack in a 2x12

    joist knothole where I had planned to run PEX to the front bedroom. I wanted to

    repair this properly and contacted a structural engineer to do the calculations

    for me.













     











    I installed the repair pieces yesterday and now I can run PEX to the

    front bedroom. I don’t have to install a convector right now, but I could run

    the PEX to a stud bay in the bedroom and decide later if I really need the supplemental

    heat.











     





  • HFC
    HFC Member Posts: 29
    The aquastat is adjustable

    Rob,

    The Myson fan convector has an adjustable aquastat for low water temperature applications. I planned to use zone valves connected to thermostats to control each zone.
  • SWEI
    SWEI Member Posts: 7,356
    is it really an aquastat?

    or is it a TRV?



    TRVs might be a batter choice than zone valves for most of those rooms.



    Like Rob, I would most likely specify a plate radiator (like a Myson Select) sized to the floor loop temp. With a TRV, of course.
  • NRT_Rob
    NRT_Rob Member Posts: 1,013
    edited August 2012
    I may be mistaken

    but I think they are only adjustable down to 110 deg f. not so good for a radiant reset curve unless, again, you can take the tinker route and use your reset water temperature curve as a proxy for when you'll need stage two help. that's unlikely to be perfect but it is cheap.



    if you are using a stage 2 thermostat though, and can keep up until you need water temps that high, you're golden.
    Rob Brown
    Designer for Rockport Mechanical
    in beautiful Rockport Maine.
  • HFC
    HFC Member Posts: 29
    edited September 2012
    Thanks for the comments

    Been busy. Discovered termite damage and kick out in

    the subfloor adjacent to the main support beam (4 x 16) that spans the garage

    and supports the second floor and roof load. It looks like the termites entered

    the roof parapets and they ate their way down the studs (termite superhighway)

    to the garage. I ended up opening the walls in the bedroom above and injected

    borates into the galleries.



    Everyone’s comments have been very helpful and I have

    decided to postpone installing a convector in the bedroom above the garage.



    I also decided to abandon using Uponor joist trak under

    the bathroom subfloor in the garage and will consider using Warmboard when we

    remodel that bathroom next year. BTW, Warmboard is located just across the road

    from us in Aptos. For now the hydronic system will just be supplying the joist

    trak under the master bath tile floor.
This discussion has been closed.