ChatterBank5 mins ago
Help Underfloor Heating
3 Answers
Hello
We have recently installed underfloor heating (under 6 mm marine ply + real oak boards ) and are having one areA only that Is hot hot hot (the rest of the floor is warm ie the temp it ought to be)
The manufacturer says this is because the floor needs 12mm screening but two seperate trades (floor layer specialist and a builder )have said u cannot put 12mm screed under real oak floors. Advice Pls. Also we have exactly the same floor and u dee floor heating in another room and this works fine with no extra hot portions TIA
We have recently installed underfloor heating (under 6 mm marine ply + real oak boards ) and are having one areA only that Is hot hot hot (the rest of the floor is warm ie the temp it ought to be)
The manufacturer says this is because the floor needs 12mm screening but two seperate trades (floor layer specialist and a builder )have said u cannot put 12mm screed under real oak floors. Advice Pls. Also we have exactly the same floor and u dee floor heating in another room and this works fine with no extra hot portions TIA
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by evedawn. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Well, the last time I was involved with u/floor heating, we had a real oak floor glued down to a sand & cement screed. Embedded within the screed was the heating pipework. Under all of this was the insulation. A normal way of going about it.
I would stick my neck out and say that your problem is unlikely to be anything to do with that.
U/floor heating runs at quite a low temperature (compared to rads). There should be no high temp. hot spots.
Do you have "zoning" controls on the wall (rather like roomstats) that give you control for different areas? I would suggest the problem lies with the control gear rather than the pipework.
Zone control is quite a specialised area. It really needs someone experienced to take a look at it.
I would stick my neck out and say that your problem is unlikely to be anything to do with that.
U/floor heating runs at quite a low temperature (compared to rads). There should be no high temp. hot spots.
Do you have "zoning" controls on the wall (rather like roomstats) that give you control for different areas? I would suggest the problem lies with the control gear rather than the pipework.
Zone control is quite a specialised area. It really needs someone experienced to take a look at it.