I've got one area of the house, that's hard to heat with both stoves. There are some insulation, caulking issues to be done,not major, and will be addressed before winter.
The lower middle of the floor plan, labeled 10" X 15". It's way bigger than that.
There are 14' ceilings on that level, and it's on a slab, with baseboard heating. It is on the same zone as the apartment (right side of floor plan). I have a 4 zone oil burner, 2 zones used. The oil burner is located in the basement, to the left side of the bedroom 19' 6" X 11' 2".
If I install radiant floor heating off of an open zone on the oil burner, boxing out the current floor to add another floor on top of that (I'm thinking ceramic tile, with plywood underlayment, etc)running pipe (copper, pex?) under the new floor in a loop, on it's own thermostat set at say 62 F during the dead of winter, would that be feasible?
I have to repair a few broken pipes on this level. They froze over the winter, and the carpet is ripped out. It's at the best place it can be for a thought like this.
Let me have it
The lower middle of the floor plan, labeled 10" X 15". It's way bigger than that.
There are 14' ceilings on that level, and it's on a slab, with baseboard heating. It is on the same zone as the apartment (right side of floor plan). I have a 4 zone oil burner, 2 zones used. The oil burner is located in the basement, to the left side of the bedroom 19' 6" X 11' 2".
If I install radiant floor heating off of an open zone on the oil burner, boxing out the current floor to add another floor on top of that (I'm thinking ceramic tile, with plywood underlayment, etc)running pipe (copper, pex?) under the new floor in a loop, on it's own thermostat set at say 62 F during the dead of winter, would that be feasible?
I have to repair a few broken pipes on this level. They froze over the winter, and the carpet is ripped out. It's at the best place it can be for a thought like this.
Let me have it
