Anonymous wrote:OP here--- to 17:19, I was thinking the cork would absorb the heat and hold onto it. Envious of your heated floors this morning! Now I am hearing conflicting things about cork floors' durability. Does anyone have any long term experience with it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a "warm floor" in our bathroom - not meant to heat the room, but to keep your feet comfy. I love it. It doesn't use that much electricity (at least our bill didn't go up noticeably) but when you compare walking on the floor vs. the corner by the window that doesn't have the heat - it makes me really glad we did it.
Do you leave it on 24/7?
Anonymous wrote:We love it in our bathroom but were told it wasn't really practical for larger areas because of how much electricity it uses.
A relative up north put hydronic (?) radiant heat - the kind with water attached to a boiler - and they swear by both how efficient it is as well as how easy it is to adjust to comfortable levels. It apparently is very expensive to install, however, which is I guess why we don't see it down here.
Anonymous wrote:We have a "warm floor" in our bathroom - not meant to heat the room, but to keep your feet comfy. I love it. It doesn't use that much electricity (at least our bill didn't go up noticeably) but when you compare walking on the floor vs. the corner by the window that doesn't have the heat - it makes me really glad we did it.