Feedback on my underfloor layout / interior room heating
Second guessing a part of my radiant underfloor install design — particularly zone 3 which includes a bathroom with an exterior wall as well as a bathroom with no exterior walls on the same loop.
There is a conditioned loft above and a conditioned basement below the interior bathroom so no exterior walls for the hall bath there either.
I installed 1/2” radiant pex in aluminum plates under the floors at the same density in both bathrooms and since this is the one instance where I have two separate rooms sharing one loop, I’m wondering if I should be concerned that in order to heat the bathroom with the exterior wall adequately, it will be too warm in the bathroom with no exterior walls.
Should I just leave it and send it as is and the difference won’t be so much, or should I redo the area in the interior bathroom to reduce the amount of tubing in that room?
I will have an ERV running, pulling ~25cfm out of each bathroom constantly, if that changes anything.
Comments
-
it is very easy now to give each room its own loop back to the manifold even if you connect them to the same zone or connect their actuators to the same t-stat. changing that later will be more or less impossible. You may also want to home run some tubing for a panel radiator or towel warmer in the bathrooms to make them warmer quickly when bathing and such.
0 -
-
For all intents and purposes, you don't have any heat loss in that interior bathroom other than the exhaust fan. I agree with hot_rod
Steve Minnich0
Categories
- All Categories
- 87.7K THE MAIN WALL
- 3.3K A-C, Heat Pumps & Refrigeration
- 59 Biomass
- 430 Carbon Monoxide Awareness
- 129 Chimneys & Flues
- 2.2K Domestic Hot Water
- 5.9K Gas Heating
- 121 Geothermal
- 170 Indoor-Air Quality
- 3.8K Oil Heating
- 79 Pipe Deterioration
- 1.1K Plumbing
- 6.6K Radiant Heating
- 396 Solar
- 16K Strictly Steam
- 3.5K Thermostats and Controls
- 56 Water Quality
- 51 Industry Classes
- 51 Job Opportunities
- 17 Recall Announcements


