PuckDrop
Industrial
- Sep 15, 2011
- 1
I have some housing buildings that I manage that have one heat source for domestic water temps and a hydronic floor heat system. When the floor heat needs more than 120 degrees F I can't turn up my heat source or I have risk of scalding with domestic water temps over 120 degrees F.
I have 2 solutions. One: separate the two systems and set domestic water at 120 , and can then set floor temps higher. Two: install tempering valves on the domestic water to keep the domestic water at 120 degrees F. I can actually separate them fairly easily but wanted to see if anyone has had this issue or dealt with tempering valves in domestic water situations and what issues may come with that decision.??
Thank you.
I have 2 solutions. One: separate the two systems and set domestic water at 120 , and can then set floor temps higher. Two: install tempering valves on the domestic water to keep the domestic water at 120 degrees F. I can actually separate them fairly easily but wanted to see if anyone has had this issue or dealt with tempering valves in domestic water situations and what issues may come with that decision.??
Thank you.