Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't listen to the guy saying boilers/radiators are a major negative on resale - he shows up saying the same thing every time this question is posed (check the archives for more on this topic). There are a lot of benefits to boilers/radiators including air quality, efficiency, silent operation, and even the "coziness" factor (think warming your gloves on the radiator before you put them on). Runtal radiators are very efficient, compact and even multi-functional (they have a bathroom model that doubles as a towel rack). Bottom line, radiator heat is superior, IMO, and for me was even a plus when purchasing vs. negative.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Radiator heaters ROCK. No toxins being blown about, they are sturdy, reliable etc. etc. I would never replace them if they were in my house. And the PP who mentioned the cozy factor is so right. I even used mine to soften butter when baking. People just want to make more money by replacing good working things.
What toxins are being blown about? You also lose usable wall space. Another issue is that reaction time is slow so during fall and spring the heat might still be radiating when the AC comes on.
In my house we have a microwave or a stove that can soften butter.
Anyways radiant heat under tiles is relatively cheap to install and you can get heat mats installed under joists for other types of flooring.
Anonymous wrote:Forced air is not great when it's very cold. Radiators keep you warmer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've heard one major criticism of radiant heat flooring: It's great initially, but if it breaks down they have to rip up the floor/ceiling to get at it for repairs.
I don't understand that, at least if we're talking about hydronic floors. If you have regular radiators and there's trouble with your boiler, you don't have to do anything to the radiators. With radiant floor heat, you have a hose with hot water running under your floor.
Did he mean that if you poke a hole in it, you'd have to rip out the floor or ceiling?
Most radiant floors are electric dum dum
Anonymous wrote:Don't listen to the guy saying boilers/radiators are a major negative on resale - he shows up saying the same thing every time this question is posed (check the archives for more on this topic). There are a lot of benefits to boilers/radiators including air quality, efficiency, silent operation, and even the "coziness" factor (think warming your gloves on the radiator before you put them on). Runtal radiators are very efficient, compact and even multi-functional (they have a bathroom model that doubles as a towel rack). Bottom line, radiator heat is superior, IMO, and for me was even a plus when purchasing vs. negative.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've heard one major criticism of radiant heat flooring: It's great initially, but if it breaks down they have to rip up the floor/ceiling to get at it for repairs.
I don't understand that, at least if we're talking about hydronic floors. If you have regular radiators and there's trouble with your boiler, you don't have to do anything to the radiators. With radiant floor heat, you have a hose with hot water running under your floor.
Did he mean that if you poke a hole in it, you'd have to rip out the floor or ceiling?
Anonymous wrote:I've heard one major criticism of radiant heat flooring: It's great initially, but if it breaks down they have to rip up the floor/ceiling to get at it for repairs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're doing a smaller renovation and are:
- adding a few more radiators for heat
- keeping low-velocity air in existing parts of the home
- adding a split system for the new sections
Sounds like an awful Frankenstein mish mash of stuff.
Anonymous wrote:We're doing a smaller renovation and are:
- adding a few more radiators for heat
- keeping low-velocity air in existing parts of the home
- adding a split system for the new sections