Price did seem to good to be true, without a problem.
Your answer is pretty much what I had seen my self.
Just nice to have an opinion to back up my initain thoughts
I looked at this option using an aggregate called lytag it's like an expanded clay ball so makes the screed lightweight.
But I would have had to increase my joist to c24 in some places and decreased the centres to 300 cc in one room with long spans, this made it unviable and labour intensive...
Continental do a product called OneBoard that is what I'm fitting upstairs.
It's a 22mm structural board with the spreader plates built in to the top surface. You cover it with a 6mm board so total floor is 28mm
This reduces warm up time and means you can lay your final structural floor before...
My suggestion is to speak to the companies that sell this stuff.
I've used continental under floor heating
They will give you lot of option will discuss it all with you and if you can give them a sketch a full plan upstairs and down.
If you buy from them they will then give you a cad layout too
Need to measure flow but not worried as just replaced the lead with new 25mm blue.
Gonna measure flow soon though before I buy anything.
What flow do I need?
Need to get a heating engineer as well so will take advice again when finally in position to have these fitted.
Looking at fitting the joule 200L horizontal cylinder in the house Refurb I'm doing.
I have a bungalow that will be three bed, main bath and shower room.
The tank is going in the eaves hence being horizontal. The joule offers the best size for this and has the fittings in the right place as...
I am currently replacing my roof including new rafters, done as part of a loft conversion.
Purlins removed and new structural kneee walls ro replace them.
It's is a semi detached bungalow.
The issue I have is that I now have straight rafters and the neighbours rafters on his side of the party...