Anyone got electric...
 

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[Closed] Anyone got electric underfloor heating?

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Evening
We're having a new floor(laminate) laid in our living room and I got thinking about underfloor heating.
Anyone got it? Any good? Easy enough to DIY? Worth doing, or waste of time?

Ta


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 6:54 pm
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Installed in a few customers houses quite straight foward and takes up less depth than traditional underfloor.. Plus the amount of lads that install it incorrect (plumbed) underfloor is laughable. Electric a even and constant heat very good imo.


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 6:59 pm
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Fwiw, we have it in our upstairs bathrooms and are glad we bothered.


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 7:11 pm
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Upstairs bathroom. Worked for a year then broke. Can't be arsed lifting the tiles to fix it.


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 7:12 pm
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Got it under tiles in our kitchen and it's very nice, but bloomin' expensive to run as often as the wife used to like. I say used to as our bill went up significantly after last winter, so it's been off since.


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 7:15 pm
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Hmmm,seems like a mixed bag then. More research needed I think.


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 7:38 pm
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Look at it like a giant kettle that uses twice the amount of electric whacked up full blast and think if would want to run it like that.
On a good thermostat its very good as you don't need it as hi as you think due to the surface area.


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 7:44 pm
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We have it in our bathroom, very nice. Thermostatically controlled not bad on the bills either. The display unit thing shows how much it costs too if you input the price per unit.
Very glad we got it.


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 7:51 pm
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Just looked at my last couple of years data and the difference between December 2014 - February 2015 compared to the year before was around £50 per month more just because of the electric underfloor heating (installed September 2014). It's been off since April when they whacked up our monthly bill.

Just don't let your wife manage the thermostat and you might be ok, but it's not insignificant. For me anyway.


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 7:58 pm
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wow....... surprised about the bills as its quite economical compared to traditional plumbed underfloor ie boiler working harder and gas more expensive than leccy in my experience. and to the chap with the broken underfloor.... you not happy its just stopped working and not leaked down below and the pain and cost of re dec and repair... more than likely a duff connection not hard to remove tiles and investigate.


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 9:18 pm
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Thats a prettyy shitty tarrif you have if you are paying more for gas than leccy,

Leccy is the most expensive form of heating short of burning 5ers per unit.

And plumbed underfloor isnt hard to install - ive managed it , installer ignorance isnt a reason to fit simple shit.

I will be fitting electic pad under tiles in my bathroom though.- wired into a countdown timer. Simple because suspended concrete floor cant have a plumbed system.


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 9:49 pm
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Yep. We've got it in an extension (rest of the house is warm air, so difficult to extend the system.)

We had is installed in the floor screed and it gives a lovely, full-room heat with little additional effect on the leccy bill - maybe £50 over the year.

BUT after 3 winters something happened and it developed a short in one of the two heating cables. I now have half the room heated and the other half cold needing a drill-down into the screed to find the short 🙁


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 10:08 pm
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Yes, it's in our bathroom. The temperature sensor in it has broken, so we have to switch it to just run on a % duty cycle instead of being temp. controlled.


 
Posted : 21/10/2015 10:40 pm
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remember electric heating is 100% efficient (energy to heat) but the price per unit is several times that of gas.

Until electricity in this country comes down to that of gas (should be lower and get lower the more green electricity we produce) then I would avoid it unless you have a very efficient house and some solar to power it.


 
Posted : 22/10/2015 12:46 am
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Very popular in Korea, new apartments have it built into concrete floors, turn it on, wait for a few hours and turn it off, floors stay hot for ages, or turn it on, pass out pissed on the bed, wake up 8 hours later, feeling very dry, and find a floor almost too hot to stand on.


 
Posted : 22/10/2015 2:15 am
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Holy thread resurrection!

I'm looking at this for our bathroom. Fairly small floor area, and we don't have much wall space for a radiator, so this might be a good option.

Can anyone recommend a good brand to look at? What's the Chris King of electric underfloor heating? 🙂

Long term reliability is a must


 
Posted : 09/03/2016 6:41 am
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Devi is the brand I spec and fit out of choice. You can get cheaper but I've not had a failure (that I know of) in 10 years of installing them.


 
Posted : 09/03/2016 7:23 am
 Bear
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Wet systems have come a long way in terms of the thickness needed to install them, with most manufacturers offering an overlay system.

Gas is about a third of daytime electricity in terms of pence per kw. Also due to the nature of using a mixed flow temperature then it doesn't make boilers work harder etc.

Also interested as to why it couldn't be used on a suspended concrete floor? I assume you are talking a block and beam floor or cast concrete, in which case it can be used no problems.


 
Posted : 09/03/2016 8:11 am
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Also interested as to why it couldn't be used on a suspended concrete floor? I assume you are talking a block and beam floor or cast concrete, in which case it can be used no problems.

because ill be banging my head off door frames if i lose any height at all - and because its suspended i cant dig it out and fit it right.


 
Posted : 09/03/2016 8:38 am
 Bear
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Ah into an existing suspended concrete floor, makes sense, although there are systems as low as 15mm now I think. Although you still need a floor finish over that of course.


 
Posted : 09/03/2016 9:10 am

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