Results 1 to 11 of 11

Thread: When should I turn my in floor heat on for the Season?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2018
    Location
    Madison WI area
    Posts
    149

    When should I turn my in floor heat on for the Season?

    Fall is here! When do most of you turn your boiler on? my floor temp is still at 70 degrees. Last year I made the mistake of putting my system on a NEST thermostat that just about broke me for LP fuel because if i wasn't in the shop for a few days the thermostat would allow the temp to go down to like 45 degrees (safety level) then when i walked in it would sense i wanted heat, and the dam thing would run for like a day to get the heat back up from 45 to 65. This year i think i am gonna set it at 60 and leave it!
    Ridgid R4513 jobsite saw, Ridgid R4512 Table saw, Ridgid JP601 jointer/planer,
    Jet DC-1100VX-CK Dust collector, Bosch 1617 EVSPK router, Bosch RA1181 router table, Rikon 10-326 Band saw
    Dewalt 735 planer, Fuji Q5Platinum HVLP,

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2014
    Location
    NC Piedmont
    Posts
    194
    A lot of variables. I have a Nest thermostat for the HVAC but in the winter I use the thermostat hooked into the hydronic system that reads from a temp sensor buried in the slab. Of course here in NC I would be turning on the floor heat later than you but I found that setting the slab temperature to 60 to 65 worked well. Do you have a sensor in the slab and if so what is the temp of the slab now?

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    SE PA - Central Bucks County
    Posts
    65,896
    Geography matters as does weather patterns...which unfortunately are affected by changing climate conditions that make prediction hard. In floor radiant can be a challenge because it takes awhile to stablize and once it's on, you want to leave it on. I'd suggest you judge based on night time temp patterns in the one to two week forecasts for your area.
    --

    The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2016
    Location
    Millstone, NJ
    Posts
    1,643
    Currently we turned off the cooling but during the day our house is getting up to 80 in NJ and we have to run the ac before bed. I dont have in floor but Id say once the house is consistently below 66 degrees you may want to think about switching it on. The house itself will be safe to lower temps but its really about comfort. Depending on your boiler it should be automated to turn on when you call for it.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2014
    Location
    NC Piedmont
    Posts
    194
    David, my question and point was that I wouldn't depend on a wall mounted thermostat to determine how warm you make the floor. It will mostly monitor the air temperature by way of convection after the floor heats the air. There may be some radiant heat hitting the thermostat but some of that will be absorbed by the cover. I find that I am comfortable in the shop with lower air temps by being subjected to the radiant heat coming from the floor. Setting the wall mounted thermostat to a typical comfort level will probably make you unnecessarily use more floor heat than needed for comfort. You may be way ahead of me and know all this and I may be mis-interpreting your question.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Michiana
    Posts
    3,079
    Turn it on now. Keep the floor at 70 degrees (or whatever your target is). If it doesn’t need to run it won’t.
    Sharp solves all manner of problems.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2018
    Location
    Madison WI area
    Posts
    149
    Quote Originally Posted by Allan Dozier View Post
    David, my question and point was that I wouldn't depend on a wall mounted thermostat to determine how warm you make the floor. It will mostly monitor the air temperature by way of convection after the floor heats the air. There may be some radiant heat hitting the thermostat but some of that will be absorbed by the cover. I find that I am comfortable in the shop with lower air temps by being subjected to the radiant heat coming from the floor. Setting the wall mounted thermostat to a typical comfort level will probably make you unnecessarily use more floor heat than needed for comfort. You may be way ahead of me and know all this and I may be mis-interpreting your question.
    The question I was trying to ask was.. Do you turn the floor heat on before the slab temp falls below what the "hold temp" will be? In my case I set my thermostat to 60. I speculate I would want to start the heat up before the slab gets below 60 degrees.
    Ridgid R4513 jobsite saw, Ridgid R4512 Table saw, Ridgid JP601 jointer/planer,
    Jet DC-1100VX-CK Dust collector, Bosch 1617 EVSPK router, Bosch RA1181 router table, Rikon 10-326 Band saw
    Dewalt 735 planer, Fuji Q5Platinum HVLP,

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2014
    Location
    NC Piedmont
    Posts
    194
    Sorry but I am still dense. Is the thermostat that you set to 60 measuring air temperature or measuring the slab temperature from a sensor in the slab? I was assuming it was measuring air temperature which I thought was not ideal. But if you don't have a sensor in the slab then I would do the best with what you got.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Woodstock, VA
    Posts
    1,006
    Quote Originally Posted by Allan Dozier View Post
    Sorry but I am still dense. Is the thermostat that you set to 60 measuring air temperature or measuring the slab temperature from a sensor in the slab? I was assuming it was measuring air temperature which I thought was not ideal. But if you don't have a sensor in the slab then I would do the best with what you got.

    My radiant system measures both ambient and slab temps. If either goes below the set amount the system turns on. There’s another sensor which measures outdoor temps which I don’t use that is designed to keep the system from swinging wildly as there’s a lag in temp response with radiant floors.

    I haven’t turned on my heat yet but plan to today. Our overnight lows have been in the low 40’s, shop temps have been in the low 60’s first thing in the morning.

    Jeff

  10. #10
    Join Date
    May 2008
    Location
    MA
    Posts
    2,260
    Do you let in air from outside via an overhead door or such?

    Not an issue for me at the moment, but in my last shop it was condensation that determined the temp I kept the shop. Which changed over the course of the season.

    The worst was when the equipment was 'cool' and I opened the overhead door and a rush of warmer humid air came in and condensed on every metal surface.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Grand Forks, ND
    Posts
    2,336
    I just turned mine on last weekend, my slab is still warm so I figure why not keep it that way. It takes alot of fuel to heat a cold slab. I'm hoping my recent mini split install this summer will help my heating cost this winter. I know I sure like the affordable cooling it provided this summer.
    A bus station is where a bus stops. A train station is where a train stops. My desk is a work station.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •