Tommyt01 Posted Thursday at 19:57 Share Posted Thursday at 19:57 Hi all. I’ve been searching the forum and the internet to see what the best solid floor build up would be for Ufh, from what I have found, I’m thinking of going with type 1 sand binding dpm 150mm pir dpm Ufh stapled 100mm fibre reinforced concrete I’ve suggested this to a couple of companies and they have advised against it and it’s not the correct way it’s done and needs a concrete under the pir and a screed above. is what I’m suggesting correct or is there a better way? If it is, what spec of concrete would be needed? Cheers Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JohnMo Posted Thursday at 19:59 Share Posted Thursday at 19:59 What do you structural drawings say? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tommyt01 Posted Thursday at 20:06 Author Share Posted Thursday at 20:06 I don’t have any drawings, this is to replace a uninsulated slab in the kitchen and wooden floors throughout downstairs Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nod Posted Thursday at 20:08 Share Posted Thursday at 20:08 As above SE drawing should really dictate this Also Why only 150 insulation If your putting it into a slab without any restrictions Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nod Posted Thursday at 20:10 Share Posted Thursday at 20:10 2 minutes ago, Tommyt01 said: I don’t have any drawings, this is to replace a uninsulated slab in the kitchen and wooden floors throughout downstairs Then I would definitely update the insulation Even 50 mil can make a massive difference Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tommyt01 Posted Thursday at 20:15 Author Share Posted Thursday at 20:15 I can put the 200mm in if it would make a difference. i didn’t know if a se would make a set of drawings just for a floor build up? I will contact some locally to advise and purchase the drawings Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Andehh Posted Thursday at 20:54 Share Posted Thursday at 20:54 How's the rest of the house? 150mm to 200mm is a big step, for disproportionate improvement.... Especially if rest of the house is lacking! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Iceverge Posted Thursday at 20:56 Share Posted Thursday at 20:56 (edited) I assume you mean something like a light grade of polythene between the UFH pipes and the PIR rather than another DPM? Alternatively you could forgo this and just tape the joints in the boards. All it's doing is stopping the juice from the concrete going between the boards and floating them. Otherwise it looks fine to me. With insulation more is always better. It might be as cheap to get 200mm of Seconds&Co PIR as 150mm of new stuff. Beware you will need to do more digging however. Edited Thursday at 20:58 by Iceverge Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Iceverge Posted Thursday at 21:00 Share Posted Thursday at 21:00 On the pipes in 100mm of concrete. This will be obviously slower to heat up or cool down than a thinner screed. Not an issue if you run your house at a constant temp 24/7 but it will require some extra heating if you have a very high heat loss building and only intermittently heat the house. If this is the case I would just use extra large rads. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tommyt01 Posted Thursday at 21:01 Author Share Posted Thursday at 21:01 All of the downstairs floor will be coming out, so it’s pretty flexible on what we can do as the new slab will run throughout downstairs with regards to depths If it doesn’t need to be as thick as a dpm, Ill use polythene to keep the concrete off the pir boards Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JamesP Posted Thursday at 21:23 Share Posted Thursday at 21:23 My floor build up has 100mm of concrete below the 150mm insulation. I set the UFH in 60mm screed. 1 hour ago, Tommyt01 said: I’ve suggested this to a couple of companies and they have advised against it and it’s not the correct way it’s done and needs a concrete under the pir and a screed above. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Roger440 Posted Thursday at 22:27 Share Posted Thursday at 22:27 2 hours ago, Tommyt01 said: I don’t have any drawings, this is to replace a uninsulated slab in the kitchen and wooden floors throughout downstairs I did foamed glass with concrete over. Total depth 240mm. Didnt meet current regs, but light years better than what you have, and avoids any risks of excavating too deep next to existing foundations. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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