Hi,
I read the forum extensively, and see that the general suggestion is not to have many zones (if at all), however there are many here also with off the shelf designs with multiple zones and they are also happy with it.
In addition, I could not find much answer if my boiler would be good enough for an efficient system, so I am looking for some advise.
Bought a house recently in the middle UK.
5 bedroom, detached, ground floor and first floor, built in 2009.
I plan underfloor water based heating on the ground floor, but so far I only got generic system quote (without plan) from Wunda.
Currently there are radiators everywhere, and in general they heat up nicely, so don't think I have much issue with heat loss, but I do not know exactly the heat loss.
Floorplan is attached.
-Floor: as I know it is beam and block, the closest I could get is an old photo from one of the neighbour who dug it up for extension, it is insulated as I know. Top of the floor is concrete with some self levelling and probably damp proof layer (photos attached)
-have wooden windows, double glazed
-planned floor type: kitchen/diner/utility and toilet would be tiles, everywhere else laminate
-current boiler: Mains Eco Compact, heat only 24kW, manual know to set temperature, so cannot do weather compensation. I think it is on an S plan
-heating, hot water: un-vented hot water tank (210l), upstairs radiators on a dedicated loop with a thermostat, downstairs radiators on a dedicated loop with a thermostat, and the hot water tank has it's own valve. One motor. All are at the hot water tank, upstairs.
The plan is to retrofit a 20mm EPS system with 16mm pipes. EPS boards would be directly glued to the floor (kitchen, utility has tiles now, they will be removed, everywhere else we have carpet and the image attached shows what is under the carpet).
Have a quote for materials from Wunda around £3.6k, this includes 5 zones, with 5x thermostat and floor temperature probes for laminate.
-tiles directly on top of the boards
-laminate with an underlay directly on top of the boards
Does all this sounds ok? Is it ok not to screed it over (that would add considerable cost).
What about the zoning? Most of the time the door between kitchen and sitting room is open, as well as the door between kitchen and hallway, and most of the time the sitting room and hallway.
I would not mind have all on only one zone, or two, maybe the Lounge on a separate zone as that will be my workplace and I would enjoy 1-2 degree less heat.
If no zoning, how the system will make sure that the laminate do not go above 27 degrees C?
What about the boiler? Overall I think it is overkill for heating, but that's what I have.
Is it worth to consider ASHP? Or a more modern weather compensated boiler?
Or just leave all as is, and use the rads and don't install UFH? My partner would enjoy warm feet though...
thanks for any comment!