Hey everyone, I'm new to this place. I've been lurking for a while so, by way of introduction; I'm an electrician by trade and I decided to undertake a lowerground/basement conversion and extension at my own house with the vast majority of the work being undertaken at weekends. I'm over two years down the road in this journey and I'm at UFH design and pipe installation prior to getting screed down.
The extension has access to the garden, all walls aren't underground but the majority of the existing house walls are. I'm going to internally insulating the walls.
My floor build up is a 150mm ground bearing reinforced concrete slab, cavity drainage membrane, 100mm PIR insulation, UFH, sand/cement screed.
As for heat loss calculations, I've been playing a lot with a few options. My first port of call was heatpunk, I found it intuitive and managed to define all of the different elements I required such as the differing wall build ups. I've also played with the famous Jeremy's heat loss calculator spreadsheet and Copilot. They are all within 10% of each other so I'm confident the heat loss figures look reasonable.
That brings me onto LoopCAD, I've struggled with the materials and insulation details to reflect what I have and therefore achieve similar heat loss figures the three methods above have indicated. Hopefully I've managed to put the right figures in and have something approximating a pipe layout. Pipework is 16mm PEX-AL-PEX, I'm sure I saw a recommendation for 20mm, would it make sense to use bigger pipes?
The area directly above the manifold is the stairs, so I need to tidy up the pipes leaving the small cupboard to get to each room. Have I missed anything obvious? Seeing as this is my first system I'm mindful I might have missed something crucial. The cupboard and hallway are both shown as being too cold but from what I've read on this forum it should be fine considering the circuits are running through the areas.
Any observations, comments, feedback would be greatly appreciated.