Radiant Heat Is Your Best Choice

By Sammie Johnson

There is something special when you are invited to a friends house and you find the floors are heated and warm. Installing radiant heated floors is something most of us would like to do but will never get around to doing. Not only is the cost somewhat prohibitive but also the idea of ripping up your floors to get under them sounds like too much trouble to most people.

It is rare now for a house to be built with only radiant heat and most times it will just be included in the master bathroom and maybe the kitchen. But this is only in more expensive top of the line homes where maybe that is an option. It is unfortunate that most people will never get to experience radiant heat in their home because of the cost and hassle of having it installed.

After a cold winter of dry heat pulsing through your house, you might be interested in radiant heat under the floors. The best part of radiant heat is that it does not swirl the hot air around the room and from room to room. Radiant heat just slowly and gently rises, never drying out your skin like forced air heat. It is also totally silent so you never know when it is on or off.

The cost of installation makes radiant heat a rarity in homes. Radiant heat doesn't fall in line with homebuilders' desire to keep construction costs low. So, as homeowners, most of us will never have the opportunity to enjoy the benefits of radiant heat.

In weighing the pros and cons of radiant floor heat, a main consideration would be your available budget. Both hydronic and electric radiant heat are quite costly. So, that is why you may find this type of heat installed in only a few rooms, the master bathroom being a popular choice. A key advantage to radiant heat is that it is much gentler to your skin in the dry winter air. You truly need to experience both the dry forced air and radiant heat to appreciate the difference.

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