Anonymous wrote:I would do radiant floor heating and forced air furnace w/ a humidifer. No one wants or does new installs w/ radiators unless you can't get central AC installed (crappy electric rads).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Depending on how old the radiator system is you will need to worry about leaks and pipe maintenance. Also during a power outage you will need to figure out how to bleed the water out to avoid frozen pipes.
You'd only have to do this if your power was out for a very, very long time -- it's pretty unlikely that a standard-issue power outage of a few hours or even a really bad one of a few days would drop the ambient temperature of your house enough to freeze the pipes in your radiators.
Anonymous wrote:Radiators are so ugly and take up space. You get cooked sitting next to them while the other end of the room is cold.
Anonymous wrote:Depending on how old the radiator system is you will need to worry about leaks and pipe maintenance. Also during a power outage you will need to figure out how to bleed the water out to avoid frozen pipes.
Anonymous wrote:Clanking radiator guy here. Can anyone actually recommend someone? Drives me bonko as fuck. Please.
Anonymous wrote:Clanking radiator guy here. Can anyone actually recommend someone? Drives me bonko as fuck. Please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Radiator market is dead, it is very costly to maintain or add on especially as technology moves forward with forced air systems. The demand isn't there and you will need to call old timers and expensive specialists. It's like the cobol or mainframe of computers.
It's so obvious that you're in the HVAC business, pushing forced air and too lazy to learn about radiating systems.
Anonymous wrote:Radiator market is dead, it is very costly to maintain or add on especially as technology moves forward with forced air systems. The demand isn't there and you will need to call old timers and expensive specialists. It's like the cobol or mainframe of computers.