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Retrofit UFH with carpet


CotswoldDoItUpper

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Evenin’ all!

 

The plan is to fit UFH in 2 downstairs carpeted rooms, the floor will be 

 

- 100mm pir (max we can get whilst maintaining 50mm air gap) between joists

- 18mm chipboard

- 20mm foiled eps with UFH pipes routed in

- ???

- underlay (0.7 - 1tog)

- carpet (1 - 1.5tog)

 

the question is what (if anything) needs to go in between the eps and the underlay?

 

Thanks! 

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32 minutes ago, Onoff said:

Wouldn't you put routed chipboard on top of the EPS?

 

Then underlay and carpet atop the chipboard?


Didn’t know such a thing existed!

 

yup will do that. Do the ‘empty’ bits of routed chipboard need filling with anything? Or would you feel the uneven surface of chipboard and pipes through the carpet and underlay?

 

I guess you could always also use pir over joists for better results then the eps? Or are either not strong enough to take the further floor make up?

Edited by CotswoldDoItUpper
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I'm a bit lost as to where the 50mm air gap is?

 

Is this a suspended timber floor? How deep are the existing joists?

 

Cleverer people will be along shortly.

 

Just Google "routed chipboard UFH" and go Images. Use btw 22mm boards not 18mm.

 

Putting underlay then carpet direct onto foiled EPS is a bad idea btw.

 

 

Edited by Onoff
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12 hours ago, Onoff said:

I'm a bit lost as to where the 50mm air gap is?

 

Is this a suspended timber floor? How deep are the existing joists?

 

Cleverer people will be along shortly.

 

Just Google "routed chipboard UFH" and go Images. Use btw 22mm boards not 18mm.

 

Putting underlay then carpet direct onto foiled EPS is a bad idea btw.

 

 


- air gap under joists (yes suspended floor)

- joist depth 100mm on 400 centres 

- I wasn’t planning on putting underlay directly onto the eps, Im trying to establish what I should put between them.

 

google images here I come!

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I think you have two options something like..

 

Carpet

Underlay

18mm OSB or Flooring grade chipboard

Routed and foiled EPS with UFH pipe between joists

Insulation between joists

 

Carpet

Underlay

Metal Heat spreader plates (just flat sheets)

Routed Chipboard and UFH pipe

18mm OSB or Flooring grade chipboard

Insulation between joists

 

I don't think 18mm Routed Chipboard is strong enough on its own over joists. I believe its intended for use over concrete floors or similar. 

 

 

Edited by Temp
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It can be a pig to get pir to fit tightly between floor joists. Some people cut them boards 5-10mm short on the width then fill with expanding foam. An option is using mineral wool instead. @Ferdinand did similar I think with his Little Brown Bungalow refit?

 

A few pointers here.

 

https://www.ecologicalbuildingsystems.com/post/best-practice-approach-insulating-suspended-timber-floors

 

Whatever you decide or get told, post up here. Someone will have seen it before and likewise comment as to good/bad. 

 

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Routed chipboard should be strong enough for joisted floor providing the routed grooves are laid perpendicular to the direction of the joists. 

 

A 3mm ply or even 1.5mm aluminium sheet on top of groved chipboard would be sufficient to prevent feeling the empty grooves. Or just fill the grooves that don't have pipe in with an adhesive, but most grooves will have pipe and this should be flush with the top of the chipboard and won't be felt though the carpet and underlay. 

 

Take care on the thermal resistance of your carpet. Kind of goes without saying but a carpet will hold the heat back. 

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LBB th

14 hours ago, Onoff said:

It can be a pig to get pir to fit tightly between floor joists. Some people cut them boards 5-10mm short on the width then fill with expanding foam. An option is using mineral wool instead. @Ferdinand did similar I think with his Little Brown Bungalow refit?

 

 

Thread:

 

The detail I used for my existing suspended floors. Note this  is  wall rads not ufh. For UFH I would want more insulation - probably 75mm not 25mm PIR over the floor. Given that my final restriction was being able to trim internal doors enough (limit was about 60mm), I might be forced to go PIR between the joists if I was not able to do things to doorframes. Calculate the u-values.

 

20171204-little-brown-bungalow-floor-buildup-small.jpg

 

The other option is to seal the void to moisture and fill it with polystyrene beads. May cause BCO to have kittens.

 

Calculate your u-values against what you need.

 

Further discussion on this Boffin's Corner thread about the build up:

 

Ferdinand

 

 

 

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3 hours ago, vala said:

@CotswoldDoItUpper

I'm in the process of installing UFH to the first floor in my home which will predominantly have carpet on top. I came across this underlay which may also be of use to yourself,

https://wilsons-underlays.co.uk/thermalstream.html

That’s a great suggestion thanks! Did you install anything between the pipes abs the underlay to ‘level’ the floor, and if not, can you feel the pipes through it?

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27 minutes ago, CotswoldDoItUpper said:

That’s a great suggestion thanks! Did you install anything between the pipes abs the underlay to ‘level’ the floor, and if not, can you feel the pipes through it?

 

I'm having a different system to yourself. I'm going for a pug screed system, so on top of my joist at present I'll have chipboard T&G boards first, then the underlay, then carpet. However I've asked my structural engineer if I could use cement T&G boards as these should make the system more efficient. However they are much heavier.

I'm a good 1-2 months away from potentially evening running the system....still doing the prep work!!

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