Warmzone.com Home Radiant Floor Heating Snow Melting Roof Deicing Warmzone Pressroom

Contact Warmzone Toll Free



Warmzone Blog

Bookmark Subscribe

Vacation-like Warmth…at Home!

It’s that time of year when people start escaping wintry weather for vacations in warmer climates.  But what about enjoying warmth when at home? Many people’s homes have areas that are practically freezing while other areas are comfortable and warm. It’s a common problem with traditional heating systems, but is easily solved by installation and use of electric radiant heating systems.

One great thing about such electric radiant heating systems can be easily and independently controlled by zone, enabling a homeowner to increase the temperature for defined areas of the home during occupancy and conversely allows a particular zone to remain off during down times. It might remind you of a programmable thermostat on traditional heating systems. It is similar to that, but actually far more efficient and controllable.

Remember, not only does the use of electric radiant heat systems not only saves the homeowner money, it gives complete control to efficiently warm your most used living spaces without fearing an enormous utility bill at the end of the month.

Electric Radiant Heat Tip: The radiant consultants and designers at Warmzone have been trained in all of the latest heating systems to properly assess your project and prescribe an electric radiant heat system that will add value to your home inside of your budget.

BookmarkSubscribe

Effective Heating Upgrades

Are you expecting a tax refund this year?  Perhaps you’re thinking about using the refund to upgrade the heating system for a small space in your home. You’ve probably been putting that project off, thinking that a traditional heating system may cost you far more than it’s worth. This is almost always the case for those who may live in small or older homes and apartments.

Older homes often times don’t have the necessary heating ducts needed to install a traditional forced air system, and installing these ducts is very expensive. Due to the cost associated with installing these systems, many people choose not to heat smaller rooms and instead suffer through the winter, chilly and miserable. However, there is a very cost-effective and efficient solution to this problem: electric radiant heat. Electric radiant heat systems are very cost-effective solutions for smaller spaces (1-5 rooms) because they are easy to install and have a very low start-up cost. An electric thermostat is all that is required and costs only about $100-$200.

Here’s yet another advantage that electric radiant floor heating offers over a warm-water system is the floor build up or height. Floor build up can be from as little as 2mm. The electric cables are usually installed onto an insulation board or directly onto the subfloor or padding (under carpet or laminate), then the floor covering is placed directly over the heating system or thinset.

Electric Radiant Heat Tip: Your electric radiant heat system could use 30% less fuel than the average new forced air heating system

BookmarkSubscribe

Everyday Radiant Heat in Your Life

The last time you enjoyed a sit-down Sunday family dinner, or a special dinner at a restaurant where you shared platters, you might have found that the food platters were hot to the touch, or you’ll hold a warm mug of cocoa — it’s then that you’ll be feeling radiant heat. Objects absorb radiant heat until they are the same temperature as the heat source, after which the heat slowly escapes to other areas that are colder, such as the air. The same principle is available to heat your home, using electric radiant heat.

So how does it work? Electric radiant heat is a unique transfer of energy that naturally searches out colder objects to warm. Instead of rising like warm air, radiant heat starts by warming the coldest and closest objects from its source. This is why radiant heating systems are generally placed under floors.

You may not be aware of this, but heating a bathroom can be responsible for a significant amount of your utility bills year-round. Bathroom heating is one such energy consideration because you want the heat quickly, but for only a short period of time. Therefore traditional forced air heating systems for a bathroom can be very inefficient, and waste a lot of energy. However, electric radiant heat can make you feel comfortably warm without having to heat all the air in the bathroom.

Electric Radiant Heat Tip: It’s not a cost-efficient heating system that’s limited to bathrooms and kitchens, electric radiant heat can also increase the comfort level of these rooms because they concentrate the heat in the areas that are generally the coolest, such as tile floors.

BookmarkSubscribe

Today’s Lesson: Radiant Heaters

You may not know much about radiant heat, but it’s definitely worthwhile to check out further. Whether you’re building a new home or updating your current home, you owe it to yourself to check out the amazing comfort that radiant heat has to offer.

If you didn’t know before, radiant heaters are a type of heater that warms objects instead of air. Radiant heat uses objects, such as the floor, to heat a home. The air in the room is warmed when it comes into contact with the warmed objects. Heat loss is reduced and the radiant heat remains in the lower part of the room, warmer near feet level and slightly less so at head level, creating the perfect climate for comfort. Seeing (or, rather, feeling) is believing.

It might seem hard to believe, but not only is radiant heating is one of the most comfortable ways to heat your home, but radiant heaters also offer a diversity of applications. Radiant heaters can be used in a number of applications in residential homes or businesses, including tiled areas, with hardwood flooring, carpeted areas, and even cement floors (such as in basements, garages, or even driveways or sidewalks).

Radiant Heaters Tip: Many homeowners are happy to report that their radiant heaters help to keep the whole house at a more constant temperature.

Posted in radiant heaters
BookmarkSubscribe

Here’s a Little Surprise

You’ll be surprised! You might think that electric radiant heat is difficult and time-consuming to install, and has the risk of uneven heating spacing – but times have changed since those early days of the radiant heat technology. Let’s get you up-to-date on how many improvements have been made to electric radiant heat, contributing to it fast becoming a popular choice for energy-efficient and cost-efficient home heating.

It used to be that electric radiant heat was, once upon a time, supplied as one long continuous length of cable with the consumer having to weave the cable up and down the floor at a pre-determined spacing and making a return loop to complete the circuit.

However, recent and improved designs in electric radiant heat cables have a built-in return meaning that you only have one end to connect instead of having to close the circuit by bringing each end of the cable back to the thermostat. Far from complicated to install, electric radiant heat cable mats have taken the hard work out of the install by having the radiant heating cable already pre-spaced on to a nylon mesh and all you have to do is simply start at your thermostat location and roll it out over the floor until it’s all used up.

Electric Radiant Heat Tip: Warmzone reports that the innovative electric radiant heat cable mats save time and offer a lowered risk of having hot and cold spots.

BookmarkSubscribe

Getting Ready to Upgrade?

Maybe you’ve had it in the back of your mind that, someday, you’d like to upgrade the heating in your home, or at least in some areas of your home. After all, you might have spent all of the winter thus far avoiding your basement, a spare room, or a guest bath because it’s just too cold in those areas to spend very long. You never quite got around to the upgrades, because you might’ve assumed the cost would be too high to be worth it.

The reality is that it’s actually rather cost-effective to add heating to a small area, using a electric radiant heat system. Because electric radiant heat systems are easy to install and have a very low start-up cost, they offer more cost-savings than you might assume. An electric thermostat is all that is required and costs only about $100-$200.

Another advantage of electric radiant floor heating over a warm-water system is the floor build up or height. Floor build up can be from as little as 2mm. The electric cables are usually installed onto an insulation board or directly onto the subfloor or padding (under carpet or laminate), then the floor covering is placed directly over the heating system or thinset.

Electric Radiant Heat Tip: The typically speedy installation time of electric radiant floor heating is worth noting; it generally only takes one half-day to a day depending on thesize of the area in which to install the system.

BookmarkSubscribe









  RPA BBB