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-   -   electric pads in tile enough to heat bathroom? (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/135628-electric-pads-tile-enough-heat-bathroom.html)

kalanamak December 14th 05 01:45 AM

electric pads in tile enough to heat bathroom?
 
I am remodeling a 8x6 bathroom that has no forced air vent in it. The
room is chronically colder than the 60-65 I keep the bedroom it juts off
of and occ. gets a little mold on the north wall (not an "interior"
wall).I live in Pugetopolis so it never gets bloody cold, but is often
damp. Would one of those prefab mats one puts under the tiles (wire not
hydro heating) be able to raise a 55-60 degree room to the 70 that keeps
the mold down or are those things just for the luxury of warm feet?
TIA
blacksalt

buffalobill December 14th 05 11:46 AM

electric pads in tile enough to heat bathroom?
 
http://www.joshmadison.com/software/
go get convert and compare the wattage of the floor unit to the results
of an in-bathroom test by you of a 1500 watt hairdryer or portable
heater. then to an infrared 250 watt heat lamp. then to a 500 watt
halogen worklight. some experimenting with these heating devices will
be required to come to your comfortable conclusion.


m Ransley December 14th 05 12:09 PM

electric pads in tile enough to heat bathroom?
 
Running a vent may not cost more but will cost alot less in the long
run, not to mention it wont smell bad any longer.


RicodJour December 14th 05 02:09 PM

electric pads in tile enough to heat bathroom?
 
kalanamak wrote:
I am remodeling a 8x6 bathroom that has no forced air vent in it. The
room is chronically colder than the 60-65 I keep the bedroom it juts off
of and occ. gets a little mold on the north wall (not an "interior"
wall).I live in Pugetopolis so it never gets bloody cold, but is often
damp. Would one of those prefab mats one puts under the tiles (wire not
hydro heating) be able to raise a 55-60 degree room to the 70 that keeps
the mold down or are those things just for the luxury of warm feet?


If you use sufficient amount of heating mat, sure, it'll heat it up to
70. Understand that the resistive underfloor heating works a little
differently - you're radiating heat, not convecting it. Your feet will
be warmer and you will be comfortable at a lower air temperature.

Check out the Warmly Yours web site. They are very helpful, can answer
your questions, provide free layout services and give you pricing.

R



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