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Matt Whiting Matt Whiting is offline
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Default does radiant heat work under carpet in basement?

Doug Miller wrote:
In article . com, wrote:

I am not sure that the foundation was insulated underneath...is there
a way to verify? The house was built in 2000 and I don't know the
builder. The original owner wouldn't know either. Is there a way to
check/verify (without digging under the foundation of course).


Stand on it barefoot for ten minutes. If it feels pleasantly cool, it's
probably insulated. If it feels cold, it's probably not.


That is funny. It would take a pretty well calibrated set of feet to
tell the difference in ten minutes for a standard 4" thick slab.


Or you could try measuring the temperature of the slab with an IR thermometer.
I'd expect it to be noticeably above 60 deg F if it's insulated, but that's
just a guess.


This won't work either as there are too many uncontrolled variables.
You are looking for a rate of heat transfer, not an absolute
temperature. Depending on the ambience temps in the basement, a slab
could be at 60 F whether it is insulated or uninsulated. If you knew of
a slab nearby that was insulated and one that wasn't, you might be able
to heat a spot on both and watch the cool down rate with an IR camera
and compare them to your slab. But that is a lot more work than finding
the original building or drilling a 1/2" hole and seeing if you hit
foam. A core bore would give you a more accurate sample, but a simple
drilled hole would tell you if foam was there, but it would be harder to
get the exact thickness.


Matt