CheckMate
Civil/Environmental
- Jun 8, 2004
- 11
I am working on a house that appears to be experiencing a passive heat exchange problem. The home is new and this is the first winter use of the in floor heat system. The house is built with plastic tubing run between the floor joists and the basement ceiling deck. Hot water is circulated through the tubes to create a warm floor and to heat the upper story.
The problem is that when they take a shower or want a drink of water there is no cold water in the domestic cold water supply. They need to run the water for a long time to void the hot water (approx. 104F) from the line before the cold water is present. This is a great waste of energy, they are heating water passively that they don’t want and then having to waste water to get the water they need. (The funny side is the kids don’t know if they are turning on hot or cold water, and the toilets never sweat. May be funny but frustrating.)
A secondary problem is the shower p-traps dry out in just a few days and there is the escape of sewer gas.
Is there any design and installation guidelines that should have been followed to prevent these problems. We are looking at going back on the builder and installer to have them remove the ceiling deck and insulate all domestic and sewer lines.
Any thoughts and advice is greatly appreciated.
The problem is that when they take a shower or want a drink of water there is no cold water in the domestic cold water supply. They need to run the water for a long time to void the hot water (approx. 104F) from the line before the cold water is present. This is a great waste of energy, they are heating water passively that they don’t want and then having to waste water to get the water they need. (The funny side is the kids don’t know if they are turning on hot or cold water, and the toilets never sweat. May be funny but frustrating.)
A secondary problem is the shower p-traps dry out in just a few days and there is the escape of sewer gas.
Is there any design and installation guidelines that should have been followed to prevent these problems. We are looking at going back on the builder and installer to have them remove the ceiling deck and insulate all domestic and sewer lines.
Any thoughts and advice is greatly appreciated.