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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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Experience of heatprofile radiant heating systems?
Hi
Anyone out there had experience of HeatProfile's radiant heating systems as per http://www.heatprofile.co.uk/NewFiles/home.html I'm considering using such a system on three holiday flats we're building and would just like some comfort factor recommendations before going ahead. Alternatively, of course, there may be some equally persuasive horror stories out there! Cheers Tim |
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"Tim Nicholson" wrote in message ... Hi Anyone out there had experience of HeatProfile's radiant heating systems as per http://www.heatprofile.co.uk/NewFiles/home.html I'm considering using such a system on three holiday flats we're building and would just like some comfort factor recommendations before going ahead. Alternatively, of course, there may be some equally persuasive horror stories out there! Sounds like another UFH company. Avoid the electric. Go for the water based one. You can always heat it via thermals store using electricity, gas, LPG, oil, solar etc, or all of them. Gives you so many options for now and the furuyre. With electric resistance wires yo are stuck. |
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"IMM" wrote in message ... "Tim Nicholson" wrote in message ... Hi Anyone out there had experience of HeatProfile's radiant heating systems as per http://www.heatprofile.co.uk/NewFiles/home.html I'm considering using such a system on three holiday flats we're building and would just like some comfort factor recommendations before going ahead. Alternatively, of course, there may be some equally persuasive horror stories out there! Sounds like another UFH company. Avoid the electric. Go for the water based one. You can always heat it via a thermals store using electricity, gas, LPG, oil, solar etc, or all of them. Gives you so many options for now and the furuyre. With electric resistance wires yo are stuck. Sorry, did not mean UHF but skirting. |
#4
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On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 17:57:04 +0100, "IMM" wrote:
"Tim Nicholson" wrote in message .. . Hi Anyone out there had experience of HeatProfile's radiant heating systems as per http://www.heatprofile.co.uk/NewFiles/home.html I'm considering using such a system on three holiday flats we're building and would just like some comfort factor recommendations before going ahead. Alternatively, of course, there may be some equally persuasive horror stories out there! Sounds like another UFH company. Avoid the electric. Go for the water based one. You can always heat it via thermals store using electricity, gas, LPG, oil, solar etc, or all of them. Gives you so many options for now and the furuyre. With electric resistance wires yo are stuck. Thanks for your post - but I'm looking for comments from someone with experience of installing/using the product. Please read the question fully before answering. Tim |
#5
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"Tim Nicholson" wrote in message ... Hi Anyone out there had experience of HeatProfile's radiant heating systems as per http://www.heatprofile.co.uk/NewFiles/home.html I'm considering using such a system on three holiday flats we're building and would just like some comfort factor recommendations before going ahead. Alternatively, of course, there may be some equally persuasive horror stories out there! Looked at it for kitchen, dining room and conservatory but the heat output wasn't high enough for winter use. For holiday flats not used then they are an elegant solution. |
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On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 21:07:08 +0100, "G&M"
wrote: "Tim Nicholson" wrote in message .. . Hi Anyone out there had experience of HeatProfile's radiant heating systems as per http://www.heatprofile.co.uk/NewFiles/home.html I'm considering using such a system on three holiday flats we're building and would just like some comfort factor recommendations before going ahead. Alternatively, of course, there may be some equally persuasive horror stories out there! Looked at it for kitchen, dining room and conservatory but the heat output wasn't high enough for winter use. For holiday flats not used then they are an elegant solution. Many thanks. These units *may* be used during the winter, and the lounge/diners will be pretty large, so maybe I'll need to rethink. Each of the largest rooms will also have modern 'coal effect' gas fires though, so that in addition might be enough? Time to get the calculator out I think! Tim |
#7
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"Tim Nicholson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 21:07:08 +0100, "G&M" wrote: "Tim Nicholson" wrote in message .. . Hi Anyone out there had experience of HeatProfile's radiant heating systems as per http://www.heatprofile.co.uk/NewFiles/home.html I'm considering using such a system on three holiday flats we're building and would just like some comfort factor recommendations before going ahead. Alternatively, of course, there may be some equally persuasive horror stories out there! Looked at it for kitchen, dining room and conservatory but the heat output wasn't high enough for winter use. For holiday flats not used then they are an elegant solution. Many thanks. These units *may* be used during the winter, and the lounge/diners will be pretty large, so maybe I'll need to rethink. Each of the largest rooms will also have modern 'coal effect' gas fires though, so that in addition might be enough? Time to get the calculator out I think! The heat calcs have to be done properly. If you can get skirting heaters in 90% plus of the room and you have addition heat from a large fire when necessary, and you have the boiler running at 80C then you may find they work wonderfully. It is best to use an optimising clock/programmer like the Honeywell CM67, or equiv. This figures out when to bring on the heating (max 3 hours), then less chance of being cold when you get up. You will probably find that in 90-95% of instances the heating system will fully cope. Most of the time heating systems are on part load. |
#8
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"IMM" wrote in message ... "Tim Nicholson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 21:07:08 +0100, "G&M" wrote: "Tim Nicholson" wrote in message .. . Hi Anyone out there had experience of HeatProfile's radiant heating systems as per http://www.heatprofile.co.uk/NewFiles/home.html I'm considering using such a system on three holiday flats we're building and would just like some comfort factor recommendations before going ahead. Alternatively, of course, there may be some equally persuasive horror stories out there! Looked at it for kitchen, dining room and conservatory but the heat output wasn't high enough for winter use. For holiday flats not used then they are an elegant solution. Many thanks. These units *may* be used during the winter, and the lounge/diners will be pretty large, so maybe I'll need to rethink. Each of the largest rooms will also have modern 'coal effect' gas fires though, so that in addition might be enough? Time to get the calculator out I think! The heat calcs have to be done properly. If you can get skirting heaters in 90% plus of the room and you have addition heat from a large fire when necessary, and you have the boiler running at 80C then you may find they work wonderfully. It is best to use an optimising clock/programmer like the Honeywell CM67, or equiv. This figures out when to bring on the heating (max 3 hours), then less chance of being cold when you get up. You will probably find that in 90-95% of instances the heating system will fully cope. Most of the time heating systems are on part load. True - but I've been in holiday flats where the heating couldn't even manage on a spring morning so I'd hate to have been there in winter. |
#9
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"G&M" wrote in message ... "IMM" wrote in message ... "Tim Nicholson" wrote in message ... On Tue, 12 Oct 2004 21:07:08 +0100, "G&M" wrote: "Tim Nicholson" wrote in message .. . Hi Anyone out there had experience of HeatProfile's radiant heating systems as per http://www.heatprofile.co.uk/NewFiles/home.html I'm considering using such a system on three holiday flats we're building and would just like some comfort factor recommendations before going ahead. Alternatively, of course, there may be some equally persuasive horror stories out there! Looked at it for kitchen, dining room and conservatory but the heat output wasn't high enough for winter use. For holiday flats not used then they are an elegant solution. Many thanks. These units *may* be used during the winter, and the lounge/diners will be pretty large, so maybe I'll need to rethink. Each of the largest rooms will also have modern 'coal effect' gas fires though, so that in addition might be enough? Time to get the calculator out I think! The heat calcs have to be done properly. If you can get skirting heaters in 90% plus of the room and you have addition heat from a large fire when necessary, and you have the boiler running at 80C then you may find they work wonderfully. It is best to use an optimising clock/programmer like the Honeywell CM67, or equiv. This figures out when to bring on the heating (max 3 hours), then less chance of being cold when you get up. You will probably find that in 90-95% of instances the heating system will fully cope. Most of the time heating systems are on part load. True - but I've been in holiday flats where the heating couldn't even manage on a spring morning so I'd hate to have been there in winter. Were all the skirtings heaters? Was it on 82C flow temp? Was an optimiser programmer used to ensure setpoint temp at the desired time? Probably not. Probably a cheap an nasty setup in a thin walled, little to no insulation chalet. |
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