Floor Heating Compatibility / Wood Stove

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GIVELET
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Registration: 24/12/08, 15:02

Floor Heating Compatibility / Wood Stove




by GIVELET » 24/12/08, 15:08

Hello,

I built my house in 2005. I installed a hydraulic heating floor in all the common rooms. In my stay, coming from the basement and going to the roof, I reserved a double chimney duct (boiler and stove or fireplace). Until now, I was satisfied with Fuel oil associated with 10 m² of solar panels.
I was finally able to put my wood workshops back in place in this house, and I produce a lot of scrap and wood chips that I distribute to my neighbor so that he gets warm.
I want to set up an insert or a wood stove for the pleasure and the savings of money and energy when it lacks sun.

The volume of my living room is important, particularly in height (5m). I wonder if creating an area with high heat will not cause convection and therefore send the heat produced by the floor to the ceiling, and therefore push the floor to work more?

Thank you for your collaboration.

Martin
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Rabbit
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Re: Compatibility Heated Floor / Wood Stove




by Rabbit » 24/12/08, 16:22

GIVELET wrote:I want to set up an insert or a wood stove for the pleasure and the savings of money and energy when it lacks sun.

Avoid the insert, the performance of these devices is disastrous
prefer a wood stove.

The volume of my living room is important, particularly in height (5m). I wonder if creating an area with high heat will not cause convection and therefore send the heat produced by the floor to the ceiling, and therefore push the floor to work more?


If the floor had to work, it would be more due to drying
(decrease in relative humidity) of the building only at temperature
of this one. Although the 2 are linked. The drying of the building
will be mainly from the supply of outside air used to supply
the stove. The relative humidity of this air will drop as it warms up
drying the building at the same time.

Thank you for your collaboration.
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GIVELET
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Re: Compatibility Heated Floor / Wood Stove




by GIVELET » 24/12/08, 16:56

Hello Rabbit,
Thank you for the info on the wood stove, indeed, it was my preference.
As for the rest, when I say "work", I mean asking for more heat producing power, and not working in the sense of deforming. There is little risk due to the fact that there is a slab of 10 and an underfloor heating load of 8cm.
My concern lies in the risk of creating convection (circulation between the top and the bottom), and therefore causing the heat to rise and keeping the cold at the bottom, which is not the desired result.
Thank you again, and for those who have an idea, I am interested.
Martin
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Rabbit
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by Rabbit » 24/12/08, 18:10

As much for me, I hadn't noticed the photo.
I thought you had wooden floors.

There will indeed be an ascending column of hot air
But this should not increase the consumption of
underfloor heating since you add calories to the
building. It would be quite the opposite. The advantage of the floor
heating is that you will not have a cold tablecloth
which is always the case when heating with
a stove .

In addition, the radiant heat of the stove must also be taken into account.
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cunseulair
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by cunseulair » 24/12/08, 19:11

You have nothing to fear from convection since the underfloor heating works mainly by radiation.
However, be careful with the setting and position of the interior temperature sensor (if you have one), it can record a higher temperature and cut the floor heating
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