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While most of the press about radiant heat has focused on hydronics, makers of electric cable systems also report a healthy growth in their business. Electric radiant floors aren't appropriate for every home, but they can be an excellent solution to certain design problems. Choosing the right system means knowing what you want it to do, and looking past manufacturers' claims to the system's real costs and benefits. Here are some guidelines. Hydronic Tubes vs. Electric CableIn a hydronic system, water is heated by a boiler or water heater and circulated through flexible tubes buried in the floor. The floor absorbs this energy, then gives it off as radiant heat, which warms people and objects in the room.An electric system works the same way, but instead of tubes, electric heating elements warm the floor. Electric systems are easier and less expensive to install than their hydronic counterparts. They're also less expensive to zone. They can be used to heat a whole house or to provide spot comfort in kitchens and baths.
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Mats resemble electric blankets and consist of loops of cable embedded in a substrate, which is often a mesh fabric. The loops use approximately 12 watts per square foot and are spaced closer together than embedded cables.
According to David Flinn at DK heating systems, which makes the Warm Touch product, the closer the cables are to the surface, the closer together they must be spaced to distribute heat uniformly over a given surface area. This makes mats more expensive per square foot than free-form insulated cables.
However, mats are less expensive to install, because the installation is a lot quicker and they generally require less floor thickness than cables. Mats can often be placed in a mortar bed beneath floor tiles. This adds as little as 1/8 in. to the floor height. Some can be rolled out on the subfloor beneath a carpet and pad. Mats come in a range of standard sizes. Most manufacturers will also make custom sizes or shapes.
In mat systems, the cables are embedded in a fabric mesh to make installation easier. |
Makers of floor-warming mats like to cite their products' fast response time. One company points out that when a radiant heat source is buried 1 in. deep in a concrete slab, it takes several hours to fully heat the slab. By comparison, it takes only 65 minutes to heat up a tile floor that has been laid over a mat. What this comparison leaves out, though, is the effect of thermal mass. Like everything else, thermal mass has its pros and cons. The thick-slab system will take longer to heat up, but the slab's thermal mass will keep the home warm for a longer period of time. If electric rates vary by time of day, you can save money by setting the clock thermostat to heat the slab during off-peak hours when electric rates are lowest. The preheated slab then keeps the house warm through the peak-demand periods, maintaining comfortable temperatures without using much additional energy.
On the other hand, if you need quick temperature changes, thermal mass tends to work against you. For example, quick warm-ups are needed in areas used only occasionally, such as a workshop that's used a couple of hours per night, or a bathroom where the home owner wants to warm up the floor before shower time. Be aware, however, that fast systems may not be best for all floor coverings. For example, quick temperature changes will put a lot of thermal stress on wood flooring. Wood floors tend to fare much better with constant or slow-changing temperatures, which is what you get with a thick-slab system.Of course, the deciding factor in whether to choose an electric system is usually cost. How do you determine when an electric radiant floor is cost-effective? "That's a difficult question," says Larry Drake of the Radiant Panel Association. The variables, he says, are the cost of the 10-15 watts of electricity per square foot of floor area the system uses, how often the system will be running, the efficiency of the boiler you would be using if you had opted for a hydronic system and the cost of fuel for that boiler.
A big advantage of hydronic systems is the flexibility of the fuel source. You can use gas, oil, electricity and even solar energy. Plus, you can change fuels for the price of a new boiler. With electric cables, you'll save the cost of a boiler, but you can't change fuel sources. Special heating or off-peak rates available in some areas can make electricity equivalent to, or even less expensive than, fossil fuels.
Another factor affecting cost is the size of the installation. Hydronic systems have high start-up costs because you have to buy a boiler. The installed cost of an electric floor can more or less be figured by the square foot. As a result, electric radiant heat tends to be more cost-effective on small floors. The larger the area you need to heat, the better a hydronic system will look. For instance, in a home with forced-air heating, it would probably cost too much to run hydronic tubes into a small bathroom. In this case, an electric floor-heating system would make much more sense.
According to Mike Breedlove of Easy Heat, you should expect to spend $300 to $400 to install an electric system for warming a small bathroom. An equivalent hydronic system would run $4,000 to $5,000. Floor-warming systems, says Breedlove, can operate on less than a penny per square foot per day if electricity costs around 6 cents per kilowatt hour. "If you're using it as a personal comfort product," he says, "then the cost of energy is less significant."
Electric Radiant Heat - Suntouch Radiant Heat - Suntouch Mats - Warmwire Heat |
Free-form cables are attached to the subfloor and covered with 1-1/2 inches of lightweight concrete or gypsum. |
Electric radiant floors offer an option for certain applications where the smaller spaces or low heating loads make hydronic systems impractical or too expensive.
This article appeared in Energy Source Builder #48 December 1996,
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| All Oikos pages copyright 1996 - 2009, Iris Communications, Inc. |