Radiant Benefits (Comfort and Efficency) |
| WHAT IS RADIANT HEAT? Radiant energy travels
through space without heating the space itself. It doesn't turn
into heat until it contacts an object that it can transfer its
energy to. Think of the sun warming you on a cold winter day.
The air temperature is cold but your body feels warm because it
is soaking up the suns energy. |
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| HOW DOES IT WORK? Warm water is pumped through
a series of flexible plastic (PEX©) tubes placed in the floor, walls,
or ceiling making a large "radiator" or radiant panel. The warm water
heats up the radiant panel which then slowly radiates heat into the
objects in the room. |
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| WHAT MAKES IT SO COMFORTABLE? Because it heats
objects, it doesn't dry out the air like forced air systems. The
floor becomes your source of heat providing heat evenly throughout.
Rooms with vaulted ceilings are warmer and more efficient because
heat does not rise to the ceiling. |
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| IS RADIANT HEAT CHEAPER TO USE? The radiant heat
warms objects and releases its heat slowly, therefore the system runs less.
Also the warmth stays where the people are and doesn't collect on
the ceiling. |
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| BETTER THAN FORCED AIR. aka scorched air.
A radiant panel may have a surface temperature of 80 degrees, while
an air register may be blowing out 110 degree air to heat the same
sized room. Many older homes have radiant systems in them. Remember
those old cast iron radiators? Even then they knew that water is a
more efficient way to heat than hot air. Todays technology is so
much more advanced making RADIANT HEATING even better than ever.
Forced air became popular because it is cheap to install, but the
home owner is left with a noisy, drafty, dry and dusty heating
system that costs them more to run .A properly installed RADIANT
FLOOR HEATING system has none of the problems of forced air systems,
and will cost 30 to 40% less to run. That’s a lot of money over the
course of an average Minnesota heating season. |
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Home
Pex Tubing
Heat Sources
Mechanical Components
Design and Proposals
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E-Mail your inquiries to:
hfs@visi.com |
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©1999 Heated Floor Systems, Inc.
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