Good morning everyone
I've got to the point of sorting the plumbing for the new UFH which has been installed in the kitchen.
The system is made by Continental and they state that it must be installed on a different zone to the rest of the heating.
I guess my question is why?
I understand that installing on a different zone will enable independent control of the UFH circuit but is there something more fundamental?
When I removed the radiators in the kitchen, dining room and utility room, I have extended the 22mm pipes which fed this part of the system and will use them to plumb in the UFH.
So, if I simply plumb in the UFH, it will then be part of the main circuit.
I'm sure I (or more likely a heating engineer) can put this on a seperate zone, but I'm just wondering the rationale
Thanks
Steve
I've got to the point of sorting the plumbing for the new UFH which has been installed in the kitchen.
The system is made by Continental and they state that it must be installed on a different zone to the rest of the heating.
I guess my question is why?
I understand that installing on a different zone will enable independent control of the UFH circuit but is there something more fundamental?
When I removed the radiators in the kitchen, dining room and utility room, I have extended the 22mm pipes which fed this part of the system and will use them to plumb in the UFH.
So, if I simply plumb in the UFH, it will then be part of the main circuit.
I'm sure I (or more likely a heating engineer) can put this on a seperate zone, but I'm just wondering the rationale
Thanks
Steve