scottishjohn Posted February 6 Share Posted February 6 (edited) as per title flooring supplers are worrying me that i can not have more than 27c output temp if i use stick down vynl tile flooring and are suggesting clikc type vynl flooring is not really suitable due to large floor areas ground floor is 22mX 8m I am worring that in winter I may need to run higher to heat house --all a guess at this stage Edited February 6 by scottishjohn Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JoeBano Posted February 6 Share Posted February 6 Don’t know if this helps, a flow temperature of 38-40c takes my 60mm traditional screed on 100mm kingspan insulation to a floor temperature 27c. I have engineered wood glued down. I sure someone on here will have a more technical answer. Have you got a temperature mixer on the manifold? If have a room stat you could fit a floor probe to override the stat when the floor reaches 27c Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dillsue Posted February 6 Share Posted February 6 If 27c is the limit of the glue, could you not use a floating floor Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scottishjohn Posted February 6 Author Share Posted February 6 system not fitted yet --UFH piping still to be laid -- just tryingto get in front of any problems Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JoeBano Posted February 6 Share Posted February 6 I would definitely fit a temperature probe if I could do it again. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jenki Posted February 6 Share Posted February 6 With a Samsung ASHP, my max outlet temp i.e. what's going into the slab is 35 deg. the concrete never gets that warm and if it did the house would be too warm. We have the room temp set to 19.5 and through the day we get 20 / 20.5 the slab never sees 27 deg. at the surface. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scottishjohn Posted February 6 Author Share Posted February 6 (edited) 50 minutes ago, Jenki said: With a Samsung ASHP, my max outlet temp i.e. what's going into the slab is 35 deg. the concrete never gets that warm and if it did the house would be too warm. We have the room temp set to 19.5 and through the day we get 20 / 20.5 the slab never sees 27 deg. at the surface. my thoughts are similar in that the room stat would turnoff before it ever got to 27, assuming no big drafts to stop ambient room temp to rise and the heat transfer through the slab should absorb alot of the heat from the ashp this is why i feel that the case where it llfted the tiles it was a gas boiler hwich could be heating to much higher temp-- 55c in an attempt to raose floor temp quickly more factual replies of outlet temps and resulting slab temps would be good If 27c at floor delamiated the glue --then i would expect people to have that problem behind big windows in the summer when the syrface of the floor could rise above 27c indirect sustained sunlight maybe contact a floring maker to get more info Edited February 6 by scottishjohn Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jenki Posted February 6 Share Posted February 6 3 minutes ago, scottishjohn said: more factual replies of outlet tempps and resulting slab temps would be good 35 deg in Max Slab temp currently 19 deg. (7 hrs after heating finished) room temp 21.5 deg. (some solar gain) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scottishjohn Posted February 6 Author Share Posted February 6 7 minutes ago, Jenki said: 35 deg in Max Slab temp currently 19 deg. (7 hrs after heating finished) room temp 21.5 deg. (some solar gain) a temp reading when it is working hard to raise floor temp would tell us something Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
scottishjohn Posted February 6 Author Share Posted February 6 (edited) OK having talked to a flooring manufacturer and getting to the tech dept i am now happy that stick down is the way to go thwe 27c that all makers quote is a max temp for direct heat and not becasue of tile lifting as the adhesive will be fine ,but discolouration of the tiles . In the most extreme cases he told me you could end up with faded lines in tiles where the heating pipes run , also flooring to go behind bifolds,conservatories etc they do not reccomand clickfit type only stick down type so that me happy that there should be no problems proviiding the pipes are well buired in the screed and not close to surface I got the impression it was more a problem with retro fit electric heating panels I did a wee test on my floor in this house --raised room temp to 24c and with input of 39c --floor never exceeded 24.5c whikle it was getting up to temp -- so no problem Edited February 6 by scottishjohn 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now