user007
Electrical
- Dec 20, 2006
- 3
I have a 'large' house with about 4000+ sq ft of radiant heat on my first floor that uses stadler heat panels with pex tubing run in them (low mass radiant). I also have a huge basement (4000 sq ft, all unfinished space) that has pex tubing, manifolds and copper pipe running all over it to get to all the different zones in the house (carpet, wood, tile) with a lot of heat loss in the basement. I have been running this system by setting the night temperature back to 60 degrees and then starting the radiant heat at 4:30 am to start warming the house up again for 7 am wake up.
The radiant heat people I have talked to say to not set the heat back at night. Several mech. eng. professors say that setting it back is the right thing to do.
There is a large amount of heat wasted in the basement getting the system back up to temperature in the morning and I am wondering if by cycling the radiant system off/on like that I am actually using more energy than keeping it at temperature all night.
I look at the radiant panels as a large capacitor that needs to be charged before heat gets into the living space. I also look at the basement where heat is being wasted as another large capacitor that needs to be charged before the heat gets into the living space. I am wondering if I waste more energy charging these capacitor every day at start up than just keeping them 'charged' by keeping the heating system on at night. of course, both capacitors are 'leaky' capacitors so keeping them charged requires energy also.
so, I am looking for opinions on keeping a low mass radiant heat system on all night or using night set back like I have been doing.
thanks for your help. if this is the wrong forum for this please tell me and I will post at another spot
The radiant heat people I have talked to say to not set the heat back at night. Several mech. eng. professors say that setting it back is the right thing to do.
There is a large amount of heat wasted in the basement getting the system back up to temperature in the morning and I am wondering if by cycling the radiant system off/on like that I am actually using more energy than keeping it at temperature all night.
I look at the radiant panels as a large capacitor that needs to be charged before heat gets into the living space. I also look at the basement where heat is being wasted as another large capacitor that needs to be charged before the heat gets into the living space. I am wondering if I waste more energy charging these capacitor every day at start up than just keeping them 'charged' by keeping the heating system on at night. of course, both capacitors are 'leaky' capacitors so keeping them charged requires energy also.
so, I am looking for opinions on keeping a low mass radiant heat system on all night or using night set back like I have been doing.
thanks for your help. if this is the wrong forum for this please tell me and I will post at another spot