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  1. #1
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    Default Heated tile floor

    We're looking at new flooring and I'd really like to go with the tiles that look like wood. My wife is a baby and wants heated floors if we go with tile. I looked into it a bit, and it might not be that big of a deal to install. Does anyone have any first hand experience with how much energy it takes, or how effective it is at heating the tile directly adjacent to where the heater is installed. For example, if the heater strip is 1.5 wide and I have a room that is 12 feet across, if I install two strips down the room with the center of each strip being 4 feet from each wall, and 4 feet from each other, will the two strips do a decent job heating the 2.5 feet of flooring between the strips down the center of the room, or will it just feel like strips of heat as you walk across the floor? That kind of info would be very helpful in determining where I could potentially save on material cost (don't need to heat right next to a wall in most cases).

    Really, I'm just looking for any kinds of tips regarding something like this. I suppose the very first thing to discuss is the difficulty of the installation, considering I've never even laid a tile floor before. Thanks in advance.

    Oh, I think the area I'm looking at is probably just over 500 sq/ft between the kitchen and living room, so I could probably heat a decent area for only an additional couple hundred dollars. While I'm thinking about it, if anyone in the real estate biz has any comments on getting the money back when it comes time to resell, I'm definitely interested in that. Also, if anyone has any input on if such a system could be a potential nightmare for renters or not. I would certainly rent with the understanding that the heated floors are a free benefit, so if it breaks, I'm not going to spend much time trying to fix it.
    Last edited by Irving; 06-02-2015 at 16:51.
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  2. #2
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    I realized that I did not specify that I was looking at electric heating. This is an example of what I'm talking about. This is one of the first hits you get after an on-line search for "heated tile floor."
    http://www.thermosoft.com/radiant-fl...ermotile-120v/

    The diagrams on the site are showing total coverage of a floor, but I'm curious if you could cover only 50% of the floor and get away with it. I'd say that even some spots were warmer than others, as long as the areas in between were still warmer than they would be without a heater at all, you'd still be ahead.
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  3. #3
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    Looks like I answered my own question here:

    For example, in a bathroom, subtract the tub, vanity and toilet areas. In the kitchen, subtract the cabinets, refrigerator, oven, etc. If not heating the whole floor, plan to heat at least the main traffic and living areas where people will be walking, standing or sitting. The heat will only spread 1 to 1.5 inches from the radiant floor heating mat. So, the surface of the unheated floor will be noticeably cold compared to the warm floor. Heating wires spaced more than 3" apart will leave cold spots. On the other hand, wires should not be spaced closer than specificed in the installation manual .
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  4. #4
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    We have heated floors throughout the house, but they are heated by water tubes under the sub-floor that circulate through our propane furnace. It is the only heat we have besides a wood stove, and it works great! I can't comment on the efficiency of the electric system you linked to, other than the fact that turning electricity into heat is probably the most inefficient use of electricity.

    As far as installing tile over a wire mesh, I'd say it's difficult enough just installing tile without having to deal with the unevenness of the mesh addition. I've installed thousands of square feet of tile over the years, but have never done it over a heated electric mesh.

    Good luck.

  5. #5
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    Well, taking some time to re-evaluate the cost to cover decent areas, it doesn't seem as cost effective as I first thought. I wasn't intending anything to replace the furnace, just to keep the wife from constantly complaining about cold floors. I'll probably just skip out on this since she can't even figure out how to use the regular furnace as it is. I don't need her getting stupid with two heating devices at the same time. So moving on, We already have a lot of tile in the house, installed directly onto the concrete pad. How big of a deal is it to remove tile and mortar from concrete? Seems to me that tile over concrete is a pretty rock solid combination. Would it chip right off and leave me a functional surface, or would it be like trying to take the top layer off of the concrete? How strong is the bond between the thinset is my question I guess.
    "There are no finger prints under water."

  6. #6
    Gong Shooter
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    Quote Originally Posted by Irving View Post
    Well, taking some time to re-evaluate the cost to cover decent areas, it doesn't seem as cost effective as I first thought. I wasn't intending anything to replace the furnace, just to keep the wife from constantly complaining about cold floors. I'll probably just skip out on this since she can't even figure out how to use the regular furnace as it is. I don't need her getting stupid with two heating devices at the same time. So moving on, We already have a lot of tile in the house, installed directly onto the concrete pad. How big of a deal is it to remove tile and mortar from concrete? Seems to me that tile over concrete is a pretty rock solid combination. Would it chip right off and leave me a functional surface, or would it be like trying to take the top layer off of the concrete? How strong is the bond between the thinset is my question I guess.
    I've removed tile from concrete while not impossible it's a solid bit of work. You can do it but get some big breaker bars with the flat tip to chip and pry them up and you may even consider a grinder to knock the residue of tile and thin set down once the tile is gone. Get ready to work.

  7. #7
    Grand Master Know It All
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    Anything with a switch or dial is a rental issue. So is tile. They get chipped and cracked then you either grab a leftover that youve squirreled away or replace a section with non matching tile.

    If you're gearing this up for a rental use vinyl products

    Removal of the tile you're going to have to rent an electric hammer and then surface grind it smooth.

  8. #8
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    I don't mind the tile that is in half the house now, but like most of the stuff in this house, you can tell it is a home job. I don't know if it was done before they invented tile spacers or not, but the grout is as wide as 1" in some place, but probably roughly 3/4" wide over all.

    Thanks for the input though guys, we're just sick of the house looking crappy and old. While this isn't a house you'd put granite counter tops into, I'm nearly positive that after everything is all said and done that the value would increase well over the cost to update it. I'll revisit this thread once I decide what to do. I want to steer away from vinyl because that is what we used in the kitchen and it is already not looking so great.
    "There are no finger prints under water."

  9. #9
    My Fancy Title gnihcraes's Avatar
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    I've personally installed them, I like them. Especially in the bathrooms. Walking in at night on a horribly cold tile floor is frustrating. I run ours all year long, on low heat to just knock the cold off the tiles. The cats like them.

    Cost to run them is nil, never noticed $. We'll probably also do the kitchen next time we re-do it.

    If you follow their layout instructions, there shouldn't be much for hot/cold spots across the tiles. The tile will absorb and distribute the heat pretty well too.

    One thing I've been told to do, is add an additional sensor, so if the one goes out, you can just hookup the other one. If you only have one and it fails, you're pulling up tiles and most likely re-doing the whole darn thing.

    PM me if you want to see the install or ask questions in person.
    Sometimes people trip and fall down stairs.
    Sometimes assholes push people down stairs.
    That doesn't mean "stairs are bad" nor does it make someone who pushes someone down the stairs any less of an asshole.

  10. #10
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    It sounds like you use yours the same way I was thinking, just the knock the cold off, as opposed to supplementing your furnace?
    "There are no finger prints under water."

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