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The Radiant Heat Experiment – Did it Work?

One whole year ago, I was in the depths of destroying and rebuilding a sagging 1950s brick ranch house, which has since grown up to become our actual home. Looking back through Google Plus’s automatic archive of my phone pictures, I can see the “kitchen” was still open to the great outdoors on that date:

mmm_kitchen_feb2014

Despite the lack of windows and insulation, I was already looking ahead with nerdy engineering glee to building a home-brewed heating system for this place, and I told you about it in the article called The Radiant Heat Experiment.

In a nutshell, this involved running thousands of feet of PEX pipe under my existing wood floor via the crawlspace and circulating hot water through it with a pump and this high-end Rheem tankless water heater.

The plan was met with both enthusiasm (generally from fellow engineers) and scorn (more often from plumbers), and since then people have been sending in emails and comments to ask how it all went. Although I’ve already dropped a few hints that I’m very happy with the end result, this experiment came with some good lessons and pitfalls which are finally ready to share.  I have also had a chance to measure the performance of the system (and the house in general) through most of a Colorado winter, and the numbers surprised me just a bit. So let’s dig in.

How it All Went Together

Last time I presented you with a daunting list of parts. The list makes a lot more sense when you stick everything together. Here is a picture of the heart of my setup as it stands now, with everything screwed onto a plywood board:

radiant_system

The funny part is that all of the brains of the system are right there on the board. All the research and shopping boils down to just that 2×3 foot rectangle. The input is hot water from your water heater on the left, 120 volt electricity for the pump through the orange cord, and a pair of small wires you connect to your thermostat to indicate “ON”. Then the hot water flows out through the zones, delivers its heat to your house, flows back into the cold side of the manifold, and returns to the heater for another round. If DIY radiant heat were more common, this whole setup would come as a single product for $199 at Home Depot instead of the $600 or so you see here.

It took only about two hours to attach all this together, and then I confidently crawled down under the house with it to get to work on the rest of the installation. Little did I know that the real work was yet to begin.

Running the Heating Tubes

This system proved to be quite torturous to build, but it was because of plain old physical challenges rather than anything technical or mental. The problem is that to install radiant heat below the floor of a wood-framed house, you need to thread a huge length of stiff, fussy pipe through an unyielding grid of tightly spaced floor joists. I divided my house into six zones, each one about 250 square feet in area. For each of those zones, I had to do the same steps:

  • Meticulously review the underside of each joist bay and clear out any remaining scraps of duct work, old plumbing, spider webs, etc.
  • Grind off a few hundred flooring nail ends poking through from the original Oak floor above using a cordless grinder with a cutoff wheel
  • Drill a 7/8″ hole through the end of each joist
  • Pull through the whole required length of PEX pipe, fighting the stiff tangly coil the whole way
  • Staple it up to the underside of the floor, using aluminum reflector plates
  • Run the ends of the tube back to the manifold and connect them into the system
  • Cut and fit R-13 insulation batts underneath the whole area to force the heat upwards into the floor instead of down into the crawlspace.

The end result in each bay looks something like this:

Here's the end of one joist bay. Tubing, aluminum diffuser plates (optional), R-13 insulation batts underneath (essential)

Here’s the end of one joist bay. Tubing, aluminum diffuser plates (useful), R-13 insulation batts underneath (essential). The fluffy spray foam insulation on the right is part of my new crawlspace insulation – not strictly related to a radiant system but handy for keeping the resulting heat from leaking out through the rim boards of your house.

I found that each 250 square foot zone took about eight hours of work. But not just a casual eight hours that flies by like it does when installing kitchen cabinets while your radio plays happy bluegrass music in the background.  This is eight hours of proper torture, crawling in a 40-inch-high space with sharp rocky dirt beneath and obstacle-laden floor joists above. Even the slightest movement stirs up thick dust, so you have to wear a full-face respirator. That’s handy, since the grinder also throws down hot metal sparks towards your eyes and face. Gloves and kneepads are essential too. And ear protection. It’s dark down there, so you also have a bright LED headlamp strapped over top of all the other accessories on your head. But the ground-driven temperature of 60 degrees is far too warm for the work pants and long sleeves you need to wear to avoid skinning your arms and legs, so you also sweat a lot. In general, I could only withstand about 2 hours of this work at a time, so each zone was done over four days.

But if the paragraph above sounds horrible, you’re just thinking about it wrong. This is voluntary hardship at its best. The physical and mental benefits of crawling and sweating and fighting with stubborn tools and materials for so many hours are incomparable. Every possible move is constrained, so you must overcome the constraints with strategy and strain. The feeling of suiting up and descending into the crawlspace each morning while knowing I could earn much more money by outsourcing the activity and instead simply typing a bit more shit into this computer was enlightening. The feeling of emerging two hours later into the fresh air and bright sunlight, stripping off the dusty clothes and seeing the beauty of the world again was life itself.

Even with all that struggle and joy, I paused the effort* after finishing four of the six zones. Those cover the primary areas of the house and are more than enough to keep up with our heating needs for the rest this year. I’m finishing up the main floor carpentry and a second bathroom, and those last two zones will go in before next winter.

Real World Performance

The Living Experience

This was the unexpected surprise – how nice it is to have warm floors. Your feet get a pleasant reward with every step you take, or as you rest them on the wood floor under the dinner table. On top of that, anything you leave on the floor gets extra toasty: a pair of wet winter boots, a forgotten coat, or even the socks you threw off before hopping into bed – perfectly warm and dry when you pick them up the next morning. The bathroom floor also dries quickly after a shower.

Keeping up with the Cold

On a “normal” January day in my part of Colorado, daytime temperatures reach about 43F/7C, but the extremely bright sunshine makes it feel much warmer. The South-facing glass of the house sucks in about 10,000 watts of heat at high noon and it gets stored in the copious thermal mass of the various interior stone and brick walls. I blow it around with a ceiling fan to accelerate this process and the interior temperature reaches a peak of around 76F in the afternoon. Then the sun goes down, the stored heat is gradually released, and we make it through the night (low around 20F) with the house dropping to a comfortable 66. If you’re lucky, the sun rises into a clear sky the next morning and you repeat the cycle – with no heating required at all!

But weather adjacent to the Rocky Mountains is anything but consistent, and this winter we have also seen an all-time record low of -14F (-26C) as well as a daytime high of 77F (25C) just a few weeks later. This is why you still need a heating system with some juice.

With only four zones running at -26C, my house was a bit underpowered – the temperature would drop slowly unless we lit a fire (I also added a wonderful high-efficiency EPA woodstove to the house – another story). From a standstill, the system also takes about two hours to get the floors to their full operating temperature of 80F. However, the remaining two zones should provide the extra bit needed to keep up in worst case conditions.

Efficiency

To test this, I had to calculate the amount of natural gas I burned every hour, and compare it to the amount of heat actually being pumped into the house. I did this by cranking up the system on a cold day and taking “before” and “after” readings of the gas meter, and noting the flow rate and temperature drop** across the whole system:

efficiency+output

Here are the things you need to look at to calculate system output and efficiency.

 

To make a long story short, the gas meter told me I used 40 cubic feet of natural gas over my 144 minute test period.  The gas bill tells me that each 100 cubic feet is 0.945 “therms ” (94,500 BTU) worth of heat. One therm costs 62.67 cents in my area. The net result is I was consuming 15,740 BTU per hour of gas, which is just under 10 cents worth per hour.

Next, I added up the (approximate) flows of those four flow meters and saw the system was pumping out 1.68 gallons per minute of water with a 16.5 degree F rise. You can calculate the energy delivered to the water with the “Universal Hydronic Formula” like this:

1.68 GPM x 16.5 degrees x 500 = 13,680 BTU per hour

Back in the design stage, this is roughly the heat loss I calculated my house would experience at a temperature of 20F, so the numbers seem realistic to me. Also, dividing the output by the input, we get a water heater efficiency of 88%, which is close to my unit’s stated efficiency of 94% (efficiency rises for lower input water temperatures, so I’m very happy it can perform this well with a 118F input).

On top of all this, I measured total electricity consumption (for the tankless heater and water pump combined) at only 55 watts, which is under $4 per heating month even if you run the system 24 hours a day. To add it all up, my home’s total gas cost this year breaks down roughly like this:

Gas company fixed monthly fee whether you use any or not: $12
Regular monthly gas use for showers, laundry, dishwasher, cooking, etc: $4
Heating for Oct 14 – Nov 12: $8
Heating for Nov 12-Dec 15: $55
Heating for Dec 15 – Jan 16: $58

And that’s probably the peak – here in February, the weather is already warming up and the system is off most of the time again.

So What’s the Catch?

When I started this experiment, I was optimistic that we could revolutionize home heating and make the forced air gas furnace obsolete. After all, the cost is lower, living comfort is greater, and you save a lot of interior space that would normally be consumed by ducts and chases – especially in multi-story homes. But until the industry advances a bit, there are a few flaws:

Building was Quite a Bitch

Installing this was near the limits of my skill and endurance, and I’m a not-all-that-old dude with lots of great tools who has been building things since I was a little kid.  However, it would be much easier if you installed it in an unfinished basement instead of a crawlspace. Also, recruiting as many friends as possible to thread the pipe will speed you up exponentially. Overall, I’d recommend it only for experienced handypeople.

Heat Output is Lower than Expected

I’m getting under 14,000 BTU per hour over the 1000 square feet I have installed so far. This works out to 14 BTU/hr per square foot. This place is pretty well insulated, so I should be fine. But an older and draftier house would lose more heat. The problem lies in the slow transmission of heat through the 1.5 inches of my subfloor and the oak floor above it. To increase that, I’d need to raise the water temperature further (it is already at 140F) or add some extra radiators.

On the positive side, you can get really creative with radiant heat, embedding the tubes into tile walls, or making heated towel racks in your bathroom that tie into the system. Each extra heated feature will deliver more BTUs. Also, installing under a tile floor instead of wood floor will increase heat transmission.

Not all Tankless Water Heaters will Work

In reader feedback, I heard stories of tankless heaters dying early or cycling constantly. Cycling is not a problem with the unit I used – it runs at variable speed so the system quickly reaches a nice loafing steady state where the pump is going slowly and the heater is barely murmuring to match the required flow and temperature rise. Time will tell how long it lasts, but I’m betting it will prove to be far more cost effective than a $3000 boiler.

The Open Loop System Has Drawbacks (as well as advantages)

I am using a single tankless heater for both home heating and domestic hot water – this is called an “open loop” configuration. It would be easy to add a second basic heater for $600 for the domestic water. This would separate the water systems, and I may do that someday.

The main drawback of combining them that you need to keep the water heater set very high (140F) to get enough heat output to the floors. This means somewhat fussy water temperature balancing in the shower, whereas with a dedicated tankless heater you just type 110F into its remote control unit, crank the hot water handle, and enjoy a computer-regulated perfect shower every time.

A second issue is that the hot water can sometimes smell like new plastic pipes. This effect faded to zero after about three months, but it is worth noting, especially if you are installing your system in a house with people likely to complain about this. All components I used are after all specifically designed for potable water.

On the positive side, I found that if you run hot water when the pump is off, water is drawn through the system through natural pressure differences. This means that in the summer, my floors will actually be cooled down by the cold water supply as it sucks unwanted heat from the house. So the floors will pre-heat the water before it hits the water heater. Double energy savings and free air conditioning.

Because the water supply is constantly refreshed and/or heated to 140 degrees Fahrenheit, bacteria growth and stale water in the pipes is not an issue at all.

Summary

It has been a worthwhile experience. Loads of learning, plenty of hard labor, a luxurious end project, and an $8,000 savings over having a new forced air furnace and duct system installed into this house. Although DIY radiant heat is not for everyone, I can declare this particular experiment a success.

—-

* To finish up next fall, I will also swap out the manual adjustment dials (white knobs in the picture) for electrically controlled actuators, and use a multi-zone WiFi thermostat to control the whole house. This thermostat is being developed by an MMM reader who has started his own company to produce it – more details on that in a future story.

** The temperature drop is configurable with a little knob inside the computer-controlled circulator pump by Taco. I set my own pump to maintain a differential of 20 degrees F, which is typical for a system like this. Then if the pump starts seeing a drop of more than 20 degrees, the pump runs faster to compensate. If it is less, it means your house is already warm so the pump runs slower.

 

  • Rich March 15, 2017, 1:43 am

    I’m a DIY whose hydronic heating retrofit is still just a gleam in my eye. I was researching hydronic systems and discovered an internet journal called Idronics from an Italian company called Caleffi. There are a total of 20 currently available to download. Each is 20-100 pages of extraordinary technical information written for installers. Incredible resource even if you do not use their products.

    Reply
  • Mychele September 13, 2017, 3:58 am

    I’m curious if there’s a way to somehow run this off a mass heater rocket stove

    Reply
  • FrugalFriend September 22, 2017, 9:57 am

    If the shower is the only place where the water is too hot, some shower valves have a solution built right in. When you take the handle off you might find something like a pin, that is just a mechanical stop for the temperature adjustment. To adjust it, turn on the shower to the hottest temperature that you plan to use, then place the pin so the temperature knob can’t turn past that point. This is a 100% free solution if it happens to be built into your shower knob. I’m not sure how common this feature is, but I discovered it in my own house after I adjusted the water heater temp to match my sink usage and suddenly found the shower too cold.

    Reply
  • Tom August 7, 2018, 8:14 am

    Any update on how this system is holding up? I did a boiler in Leadville 20 years ago, so have a perspective, and admire the elegant simplicity of your stem, thanks,

    Reply
    • Mr. Money Mustache August 8, 2018, 4:22 pm

      Hi Tom,

      Still trouble-free as of 2018! And since then, I have added two zones to it: one for the concrete slab of a detached insulated studio building I made, and another for the master bedroom which had formerly gone without heat :-)

      I would definitely repeat this process to create another system, with the caveat that electric heat pumps are now more efficient than a gas boiler in many climates, and the world is probably moving away from natural gas in the next 10-20 years, so the system will be obsolete at some point. But as long as you don’t spend too much on it right now, an under-floor hot water heating system still seems like a good choice.

      Reply
  • Carl B August 8, 2018, 7:21 pm

    I am starting to put together a hydronic heated floor for my garage which has zones. You mentioned in your blog there is a member who is developing wifi actuators to measure room temperature. Any updates on this.

    Reply
  • Andrew H January 1, 2019, 8:45 am

    This is an awesome experiment! I learned a whole lot from reading it. However I am still somewhat in need of help as I want to do this or something like this with my house.

    In about 3-4 months my wife and I will be pulling out all the carpet to put in Doug fur hardwood flooring. I would like to put in another inch of sub floor to suck up a lot of the bends and squeaks in the floor and was thinking I could just cut out grooves all a crossed the house in that sub floor to place my pet pipe or whatever is best to use. Then lay the hardwood over that.
    However all the rest of the system is new to me. The valves, pump, tankless heaters.
    We have propane heating 1000 gal tank.
    Grandpa and I built the house outselves about 3 years ago so it is new. The squeeks are because we were on a budget and the T&G floor is thin.

    If anyone has some time to help me out that would be awesome. As with anything we have a budget but I really want to get these heated floors in before the hardwood and right under the hardwood for efficiency.

    Reply
  • Daryl Prindle April 17, 2019, 4:14 pm

    You did a great job and good description. You might want to check out this site for retro-fitting a radiant system. https://www.radiantec.com/installation-manuals/installing-tubing-within-a-subfloor/

    Reply
  • Vanman August 18, 2019, 9:50 pm

    Hi Mr. MM! Great article, i’m considering this for my place now here in 2019. Have you made any changes to your system since you wrote this in 2015, and are you still happy with your hardware choices? If you were to do it today, what hardware would you use?

    Reply
  • Smith April 16, 2020, 9:02 am

    There are a lot of PEX brands out there with quite a price variation. Do you have recommendations for the ones that are the best?

    Thanks

    Reply
  • Mike Cousins October 16, 2020, 8:15 am

    I’ve searched this blog and Google and haven’t seen any updates regarding the reference MMM made to following multi-zone thermostat:

    * To finish up next fall, I will also swap out the manual adjustment dials (white knobs in the picture) for electrically controlled actuators, and use a multi-zone WiFi thermostat to control the whole house. This thermostat is being developed by an MMM reader who has started his own company to produce it – more details on that in a future story.

    Did I miss it? …By chance did that MMM reader get that done? If not, is there an alternative multi-zone WiFi thermostat that’s folks recommend? Thank you.

    PS1. MMM’s article motivated me to install my radiant floor heating … AND I’m also putting in new heat pumps/ACs from a company called Mr Cool. They’re relatively unknown, but have good warranty and reviews are good. And get this, their HVAC systems are designed for DIYers, most notably by including systems/lines with pre-filled refrigerant!!

    PS2. Intimated by load calculations, Manual J, S, T, and D calculations? … Don’t be, if you’re patient you can do them yourself with the aid of software from this company (www.hvacloadcalculator.com) among others.

    Reply
    • Mr. Money Mustache October 17, 2020, 9:02 am

      Hey Mike, sorry that particular part of my plan didn’t come to fruition! The house ended up working perfectly well as just one zone, so I left it like that.

      But you could definitely still do the plan I described. What you need is a zone controller (https://www.supplyhouse.com/Taco-ZVC403-4-3-Zone-Valve-Control-Module-with-Priority)

      And actuators for each zone: https://www.supplyhouse.com/Uponor-Wirsbo-A3030522-Two-Wire-Thermal-Actuator-For-EP-Heating-Manifold

      Then for the thermostats, I would simply add a separate wifi thermostat for each zone – they all show up in one app (or your Google Home / Alexa or whatever) for voice or menu control. Things have advanced quite a bit since I wrote this article so there is no need for a specialized multi zone thermostat any more.

      Reply
    • Michael October 17, 2020, 1:51 pm

      Mike,

      I’ve looked into the specs on the DIY Mr Cool equipment. You might want to weigh the difference in cost between a contractor installing a different mini-split vs the Mr Cool system and the energy savings in SEER and HSPF between a more efficient model. As a commercial and industrial HVAC mechanic, I’m not sold on their equipment just yet.

      I’m also looking into radiant floor heating as I have a rancher and access to my floor via my basement. But right now I’d save more money changing out my single pane windows after I did an online energy audit on my home from https://www.sustainableinteriyours.com

      Then I’ll do some math and see if it’s worth it to change over from my oil boiler to one of those hybrid heat pump water heaters just to do radiant floor. Should be pretty neat.

      MMM,

      Love your articles, has totally given me the motivation to downsize my living expenses, make a business in increasing energy efficiency, and shoot for financial freedom. Thanks so much for everything you do.

      Reply
  • Jason A Palmer December 21, 2020, 9:20 pm

    Hi mr. Money mustache. I am doing this exact system right now for my 2600 sqft home in maine and i think its brilliant. However i am having trouble wiring up the thermostat to the taco variable pumps and have been unable to find any sort of video online. Am i just retarded? I can get power to the pump just fine and know how to hook the sensors up but no matter what i do when i hook the thermostat up and turn up the heat the pumps dont respond at all. Can you show a picture of the wiring on your thermostat and pump? Or maybe just an explanation?

    Thanks for all the detail and the idea.

    Reply
    • Mr. Money Mustache December 21, 2020, 9:28 pm

      Hey Jason, I think you will get there because it’s pretty simple overall. The pump just has two terminals that need to be connected together when you want it to fire up – they are labeled “HEAT REQ”. Start by connecting them together manually with a wire and verify that the pump runs.

      If not, check the two thermometer leads – ensure that the “intake” one is on something cold, and the output is on something hot. Otherwise, the pump might not be detecting enough difference between the two, in which case it will not run. Also, play with the dial on the pump that allows you to control how sensitive it is to this temperature differential.

      If all that works, the next step is to connect it, simply between the red and white wires on a simple thermostat (R and RC I think? – look at the instructions for your particular thermostat)

      If it does NOT work, it is possible that your pump’s electronic control unit isn’t working. I have seen this happen once, when building the system for a second time with a friend. Luckily, Taco has excellent customer support and they mailed him a new one quickly.

      Reply
  • DIY GUY November 30, 2021, 1:13 pm

    Reviewing the design layout drawing from your initial post, I don’t see how water could flow to provide a cooling effect in the summer. The system is tied into the hot side of the water heater, so it would either flow in the normal orientation, heating your floors in the summer; or if the water flowed in reverse orientation of the pump, it would indeed be pulling cold water thru the system, but then acting as an unregulated mixing valve cooling the hot water output from the water heater by mixing it with cold water. Am I missing something? I’ve reviewed this post several times thinking thru a similar project in the future, and just happened to ponder that this time.

    Reply

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